Moʻolelo Ea O Nā Hawaiʻi
History of Native Hawaiian Governance in Hawaiʻi
Prepared for the Office of Hawaiian Affairs by
Davianna Pōmaikaʻi McGregor and
Melody Kapilialoha MacKenzie
August 19, 2014
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Authors Dr. Davianna Pōmaika‘i McGregor is a Professor and founding member of the Ethnic Studies Department at the University of Hawai‘i-Mānoa. Melody Kapilialoha MacKenzie is a Professor at the William S. Richardson School of Law, University of Hawaiʻi–Mānoa, and Director of Ka Huli Ao Center for Excellence in Native Hawaiian Law.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to acknowledge the many people who have contributed to this work over the years including Richardson School of Law graduates Nāpali Souza, Adam P. Roversi, and Nicole Torres. We are particularly grateful for the comments and review of this manuscript by Lilikalā Kame ʻeleihiwa, Sen the University of Hawaiʻi-Mānoa, whose depth of knowledge and expertise were invaluable in refining this moʻolelo. We are also thankful for the help of the staff of the OHA Advocacy Division who, under the direction of Kawika Riley, spent many hours proofreading and formatting this manuscript. Copyright © 2014 OFFICE OF HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS. All Rights Reserved. No part of this report may be reproduced or transmitted in whole or in part in any form without the express written permission of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, except that the United States Department of the Interior may reproduce or transmit this report as needed for the purpose of including the report in the public docket for Regulation Identifier Number 1090-AB05. Please note that the original August 19, 2014 submission to the Department of Interior was revised by the authors in 2015 to include edits for the publication of the manuscript. The authors requested to have the updated version of the preface and first chapter posted with a table of contents for the full manuscript. The full manuscript can be obtained by contacting Kawika Riley at the Office of Hawaiian Affairs - [email protected]
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Preface
To assist the reader of this moʻolelo or history of Native Hawaiian governance in Hawaiʻi,
the authors would like to share a discussion of some key terms that are used in the manuscript.
Hawaiian Language Terms
Hawaiian - Hawaiʻi
Hawaiʻi and Kanaka Hawaiʻi are the two terms that are translated as “Hawaiian” in the
Hawaiian Language Dictionary by Mary Kawena Pukui and Samuel H. Elbert.1
Native Hawaiian - Kanaka Maoli and Kanaka ʻŌiwi
For “native,” there are several terms provided in the Hawaiian dictionary - maoli, ʻōiwi,
kamaʻāina, kupa, keiki papa, kulaiwi, keiki hānau o ka ʻāina, ewe hānau o ka ʻāina.
Over time, as discussed below, the terms Kanaka Maoli and Kanaka ʻŌiwi have
evolved as the popular Hawaiian terms for Native Hawaiian.
Maoli means native, indigenous, genuine, true, and real according to the Hawaiian
dictionary. Kanaka maoli has been popularized as the appropriate indigenous term for Native
Hawaiian by advocates of Native Hawaiian sovereignty and independence and is the term for
Native Hawaiian(s) used throughout this manuscript.
ʻŌiwi means native and native son and can be literally translated as “of the ancestral bone.”
For Native Hawaiians, the bones of our ancestors and ourselves are sacred and hold the essence
of the soul and spirit of our predecessors, our descendants and ourselves. Within our iwi resides
our mana or spiritual power. The core of our ancestral memory and knowledge, that which has
been transmitted to us through generations past and will pass to generations to come, resides
within our iwi or our bones. It is this ancestral connection that makes the term ʻōiwi significant.
1 Mary Kawena Pukui, Hawaiian Dictionary: Hawaiian-English, English-Hawaiian (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1986).
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An ʻōlelo noʻeau or Hawaiian proverb states, “Kuʻu ewe, kuʻu piko, kuʻu iwi, kuʻu koko”
means “My afterbirth, my navel, my bones, my blood” and it refers to a very close relative.2
Someone who is Native Hawaiian, Kanaka Maoli and Kanaka ʻŌiwi can be said to be one who is
of the ewe, piko, iwi and koko of at least one Hawaiian ancestor who was part of the aboriginal
people who, prior to 1778, occupied and exercised sovereignty in the area that now constitutes
the State of Hawaiʻi.
Politically, the distinction between Native Hawaiians and non-Native Hawaiians did not
become significant until the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi allowed foreigners to become naturalized
citizens and subjects of the Kingdom. In the 1859 Civil Code, the legislature of the Hawaiian
Kingdom and Constitutional Government, used the term kanaka maoli to refer specifically to
Native Hawaiians and the term kanaka kupa to refer to all subjects of the King, whether native or
naturalized.3 In the censuses of the Hawaiian Kingdom in 1878 and 1890 the term kanaka maoli
referred to someone who was of full Native Hawaiian ancestry, while persons who were of
mixed parentage were referred to as hapa-haole or half-caste. Therefore, it appears that the term
kanaka maoli further evolved in the late nineteenth century to mean full Hawaiian. Meanwhile
the term Kānaka ʻŌiwi, not used in official laws, continued to refer inclusively to anyone who
was “of the ancestral bone” or lineage, in other words, anyone who is Hawaiian by ancestry.
2 Mary Kawena Pukui, ʻOlelo Noeʻau: Hawaiian Proverbs and Poetical Sayings (Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press, 1983), # 1932, p. 207. 3 See, for instance, Section 480 of the 1859 Civil Code requiring a poll-tax for every male Hawaiian subject and alien between the ages of seventeen and sixty years. 1859 Civil Code of the Hawaiian Islands, p. 105. The Hawaiian version uses the term “kanaka kupa Hawaii” for Hawaiian subject and “haole i hookupa oleia” for alien. O Kanawai Kiwila O Ko Hawaii Pae Aina 1859, p. 78. In contrast, see Section 142, forbidding foreign vessels or Hawaiian vessel engaged in foreign trade from taking any native out of Hawaii without obtaining permission. The term used for native in this section is “kanaka maoli.” 1859 Civil Code, p. 75; Kanawai Kiwila 1859, p. 26.
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Importantly the 1897 petitions in opposition to annexation of Hawaiʻi to the U.S. used the term
“Hawaii oiwi” for Native Hawaiians.
Indigenous Peoples Within the United States
Within the United States of America, the rights of indigenous peoples arise from a unique
legal relationship based upon the Constitution of the United States, treaties, statutes, Executive
orders, and court decisions. Since the early formation of the United States, the courts have
characterized Indian tribes as “domestic dependent nations” under the protection of the federal
government.4 Indigenous American Indian nations retain inherent powers of self-governance and
self-determination because they are sovereign entities that existed before the formation of the
United States.5 Consequently, native nations today with whom the U.S. federal government has a
government-to-government relationship exercise certain fundamental and inherent powers of
self-governance protected and supported by U.S. law.6 These include the power to establish a
form of government, determine membership, exercise police powers, administer justice, and
maintain immunity from suit among others.7
As of July 2015, the U.S. had acknowledged a government-to-government relationship
with 567 American Indian and Alaska Native nations, tribes and peoples.8 In 2012, there were
4 Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, 30 U.S. 1 (1831). 5 In Cherokee Nation, Chief Justice Marshall found that because of the nature of the federal-Indian relationship, the United States had assumed a protectorate status over Indian nations. This protectorate status did not extinguish Indian sovereignty but preserved it and insulated it from state interference. Id. at at 560–61. 6 See Felix S. Cohen’s Handbook of Federal Indian Law, Nell Jessup Newton, ed. (LexisNexis 2012), § 4.01. 7 See id. § 4.01[2] (discussing the extent of tribal powers). 8 See Indian Entities Recognized and Eligible to Receive Services from the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs, 79 Fed. Reg. 4748–53 (Jan. 29, 2014), for a listing of the 566 American Indian and Alaska Native entities recognized and entitled to receive federal services.
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more than 5 million American Indian and Alaska Natives throughout the United States.9 As of
2010, approximately 22 percent of the American Indian and Alaska Native population lived in
American Indian and Alaska Native areas, including 325 American Indian reservations and
Alaska Native villages, as well as off-reservation trust lands, Oklahoma tribal areas, state
American Indian reservations, and other areas near tribal lands.10
Native Hawaiians as an Indigenous People Under International Law
Internationally, the United Nations Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and
Protection of Minorities undertook an eleven-year study, completed in 1987, of indigenous
populations in 37 different countries.11 The report provides important insights on the conditions
and status of indigenous peoples throughout the world, which parallel that of Native Hawaiians.
For example, Paragraph 376 states:
It is clear that indigenous peoples consider themselves to be different from the other groups that form the society of present-day nation-States in which they now find themselves included. They consider themselves to be the historical successors of the peoples and nations that existed on their territories before the coming of the invaders of these territories, who eventually prevailed over them and imposed on them colonial or other forms of subjugation, and whose historical successors now form the predominant sectors of society. It is also abundantly clear that indigenous peoples consider themselves different from those other peoples and demand the right to be considered different by other sectors of society and by the international community.12
The definition of indigenous peoples provided in the U.N. report, Paragraphs 379 through 382,
also corresponds with the status of Native Hawaiians under the U.S.:
9 See American Indian and Alaska Native Heritage Month, U.S. Census Bureau, available at http://www.census.gov/newsroom/releases/archives/facts_for_features_special_editions/cb13-ff26.html (last visited July 25, 2014). 10 Id. 11 Jose R. Martinez Cobo, Study of the Problem of Discrimination Against Indigenous Populations Volume V. Conclusions, Proposals and Recommendations (New York: United Nations, 1987) 12 Id., p. 29
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379. Indigenous communities, peoples and nations are those which, having a historical continuity with the pre-invasion and pre-colonial societies that developed on their territories, consider themselves distinct from other sectors of the societies now prevailing in those territories, or parts of them. They form at present non-dominant sectors of society and are determined to preserve, develop and transmit to future generations their ancestral territories, and their ethnic identity, as the basis of their continued existence as peoples, in accordance with their own cultural patterns, social institutions and legal systems. 380. This historical continuity may consist of the continuation, for an extended period reaching into the present, of one or more of the following factors: (a) Occupation of ancestral lands, or at least of part of them; (b) Common ancestry with the original occupants of these lands; (c) Culture in general, or in specific manifestations (such as religion, living under a tribal system, membership of an indigenous community, dress, means of livelihood, life-style, etc.) (d) Language (whether used as the only language, as mother-tongue, as the habitual means of communication at home or in the family, or as the main, preferred, habitual, general or normal language); (f) Other relevant factors. 381. On an individual basis, an indigenous person is one who belongs to these indigenous populations through self-identification as indigenous (group consciousness) and is recognized and accepted by these populations as one of its members (acceptance by the group). 382. This preserves for these communities the sovereign right and power to decide who belongs to them, without external interference.13
The U.N. established a Working Group on Indigenous Populations, which worked over a
ten-year period to develop and gain support for a Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples. The Declaration was finally adopted by the U.N. General Assembly on September 13,
2007.14 At the core of these rights is the right to self-determination. Articles 3, 4, and 5 of the
U.N. Declaration state:
Article 3 Indigenous peoples have the right to self-determination. By virtue of that right
13 Id. 14 United Nations, United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (New York: 107th Plenary Meeting, September 13, 2007), available at http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/unpfii/documents/DRIPS_en.pdf (last viewed June 27, 2014).
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they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development. Article 4 Indigenous peoples, in exercising their right to self-determination, have the right to autonomy or self-government in matters relating to their internal and local affairs, as well as ways and means for financing their autonomous functions. Article 5 Indigenous peoples have the right to maintain and strengthen their distinct political, legal, economic, social and cultural institutions, while retaining their right to participate fully, if they so choose, in the political, economic, social and cultural life of the State.
Moreover, in relation to claims to ancestral and national lands, Article 26 of the U.N. Declaration
states:
Article 26 1. Indigenous peoples have the right to the lands, territories and resources which
they have traditionally owned, occupied or otherwise used or acquired. 2. Indigenous peoples have the right to own, use, develop and control the
lands, territories and resources that they possess by reason of traditional ownership or other traditional occupation or use, as well as those which they have otherwise acquired.
3. States shall give legal recognition and protection to these lands, territories and
resources. Such recognition shall be conducted with due respect to the customs, traditions and land tenure systems of the indigenous peoples concerned.
Although the United States initially did not vote in favor of the declaration, on December
16, 2010, President Barrack Obama announced U.S. support for the Declaration. The Declaration
informs the policy of the U.S. government with regard to indigenous peoples within the U.S., and
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as set out in the State Department’s announcement of support, specifically includes the Native
Hawaiian people.15
Conditions of Native Hawaiians
At the beginning of the twenty-first century, the 2000 U.S. census recorded 401,162 Native
Hawaiians in the United States. Of this number, 239,655 or 60 percent lived in the Hawaiian
Islands. Native Hawaiians comprised 20 percent of the population of Hawaiʻi in 2000. In the
2010 U.S. Census, there were 527,077 Native Hawaiians in the U.S., with 289,970 or 55 percent
living in the Hawaiʻi and 237,107 or 45 percent living in the continental U.S. Native Hawaiians
comprised 21.3 percent of Hawaiʻi’s population in 2010.16
From 2006 to 2010, 6.7 percent of the households in Hawaiʻi earned incomes below the
poverty level, while a higher percentage of the Native Hawaiians households in Hawaiʻi, 10.8
percent, earned incomes below the poverty status. 17 The median income for households in
Hawaiʻi from 2006 to 2010 was $66,420, however the median income for Native Hawaiian
households during this period was $62,852.18 In Hawaiʻi, 90.4 percent of the population are high
school graduates or higher, and slightly less, 89.8 percent, of the Native Hawaiian population
15 Announcement of U.S. Support for the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Initiatives to Promote Government-to-Government Relationship & Improve the Lives of Indigenous Peoples, available at http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/153223.pdf (last visited June 27, 2014). 16 Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Native Hawaiian Data Book, Table 1.19: Native Hawaiian Population by Region in the United States: 1990, 2000, 2010, available at http://www.ohadatabook.com/T01-19-13.pdf (last visited July 24, 2014). 17 Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Native Hawaiian Data Book, Figure 2.59 Native Hawaiian families by Poverty Status and Family Type in Hawaiʻi: 2006 - 2010, available at http://www.ohadatabook.com/T02-59-13.pdf (last visited July 24, 2014). 18 Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Native Hawaiian Data Book, Figure 2.54 Distribution of Native Hawaiian Household Income in Hawaiʻi: 2006 - 2010, available at http://www.ohadatabook.com/F02-54-13.pdf (last visited July 24, 2014).
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have achieved that level of education. Of this amount, 19.6 percent of Hawaiʻi’s population have
earned a bachelor’s degree, but only 10.4 percent of Native Hawaiians have earned this degree.19
In 2013, Native Hawaiians made up 28.9 percent of the homeless population in the
Hawaiian Islands.20 Among the unemployed in Hawaiʻi from 2006 to 2010, 6.2 percent of the
Native Hawaiians were unemployed as compared to 3.6 percent for the State of Hawaiʻi
overall.21
In 2009, Native Hawaiians were overrepresented in the inmate population of Hawaiʻi
Correctional Facilities, comprising 36 percent of those admitted to prison. Native Hawaiian
women represent 44 percent of the women incarcerated by the State of Hawaiʻi.22
Native Hawaiians in Hawaiʻi have high rates of risk factors for cardiovascular disease and
cancer due to low incomes that hinder access to health care. Native Hawaiians suffer mortality
rates that are higher than the other ethnic and national groups in Hawaiʻi for heart disease (68
percent higher), cancer (34 percent higher), stroke (20 percent higher) and diabetes (130 percent
higher).23 The life expectancy of 74.3 years for Native Hawaiians is 6.2 years lower than the life
19 American Community Survey 1 Year SO201 State of Hawaiʻi: Selected Population Profile for Native Hawaiians and the State of Hawaiʻi 2012, available at http://www.ohadatabook.com/ACS_12_1YR_S0201_STATE_HI.pdf (last visited July 24, 2014). 20 Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Native Hawaiian Data Book, Table 2.115 update: Homeless Outreach Program Participation by Ethnicity by County in Hawaii: 2013, available at http://www.ohadatabook.com/T02-115-13.pdf (last visited July 24, 2014). 21 Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Native Hawaiian Data Book, Table 2.37 Unemployed Native Hawaiian Civilian Labor Force by County: 2006-2010, available at http://www.ohadatabook.com/T02-37-13.pdf (last visited July 24, 2014). 22 Office of Hawaiian Affairs, The Disparate Treatment of Native Hawaiians in the Criminal Justice System, 2010, pp. 10 - 11. 23 Department of Native Hawaiian Health, Center for Native and Pacific Health Disparities Research, John A. Burns School of Medicine, UH-Mānoa, Assessment and Priorities for Health and Well-Being in Native Hawaiians & Other Pacific Peoples, 2013, p.9. The report states, “Waiʻanae on Oʻahu, with one of the highest concentration of Native Hawaiians in the State, has the highest rates of death from heart disease and cancer, and a higher occurrence of obesity, diabetes, and high blood pressure.”
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expectancy for the State, at 80.9 years, even though Native Hawaiian life expectancy has
increased by 11.8 years since 1950.24
Among the 45 percent of Native Hawaiians living outside of Hawaiʻi, many are students
attending American colleges and universities and those who secured jobs in their chosen
profession upon graduation. A number serve in the U.S. armed forces or are dependents of those
who do. Studies indicate that higher-paying, better quality jobs, and the lower cost of housing
and living expenses on the continental U.S. contribute to the out-migration from the islands.
The socio-economic statistics of Native Hawaiians in 2010 reflected a disparity in the
standard of living between Native Hawaiians and Caucasians, Japanese, and Chinese in Hawaiʻi.
These statistics reflect the individual and collective pain, bitterness and trauma of a people who
are largely marginalized and dispossessed in their own homeland. They indicate the plight of a
people whose sovereignty has been and remains suppressed.
Hawaiian Home Lands
Congress passed the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act (HHCA) in 1921, setting aside
more than 200,000 acres of former Crown and Government lands of the Hawaiian Kingdom and
Constitutional Monarchy for homesteading by Native Hawaiians of not less than fifty percent
Hawaiian ancestry.25 Pursuant to provisions of the HHCA, the Hawaiʻi State Department of
Hawaiian Home Lands provides direct benefits to Native Hawaiians in the form of 99-year
homestead leases for residential, agricultural or pastoral purposes at an annual rental of $1.26
Other benefits provided by the HHCA include financial assistance through direct loans or loan
guarantees for home construction, replacement, or repair, and for the development of farms and
24 Id., p. 7 25 Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, Pub. L. No. 67-34, 42 Stat. 108 (1921). 26 The Hawaiian Homes Commission Act was amended to allow a total lease period of 199 years. See HHCA, Sec. 208(2).
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ranches; technical assistance to farmers and ranchers; and the operation of water systems.27 As of
2012, there were 9,849 leases to Native Hawaiians for residential, agricultural and pastoral lands
of the HHCA. Moreover, there were 26,550 qualified Native Hawaiian applicants on the waiting
list for an HHCA land award.28
Ka Pae ʻĀina Hawaiʻi - The Hawaiian Archipelago
The Hawaiian Kingdom and Constitutional Monarchy ruled over Ka Pae ʻĀina Hawaiʻi,
the Hawaiian archipelago, which, in addition to the eight major inhabited islands, includes 124
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands stretching to Kure Island. In addition to the 4,126,000 acres of
the eight major Hawaiian Islands, there are an additional 254,418.10 acres of emerged and
submerged lands that comprise the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Since 2006 these islands are
managed as the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument.
Use of Hawaiian Language and Diacritical Marks
Diacritical marks help to clarify for the reader the meaning of words in ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi,
the Hawaiian language. Thus, in this moʻolelo, to the greatest extent possible, diacritical marks
are used in Hawaiian words, except in some proper names and in direct quotations where
Hawaiian words appear as they did in the original texts. The sources for translations of ʻŌlelo
Hawaiʻi text into English are either cited in a footnote or are the official translations of laws and
documents, such as the statutes and laws of the Hawaiian Kingdom, utilized at the relevant
period in Hawaiʻi’s history.
27 Web site of the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, available at http://dhhl.hawaii.gov/hhc/laws-and-rules/ (last visited July 24, 2014). 28 Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, ʻĀina Hoʻopulapula Hōʻike Makahiki, Annual Report 2012, available at http://dhhl.hawaii.gov/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/DHHL-Annual-Report-2012-Web.pdf (last visited July 24, 2014), pp. 51, 57.
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Table of Contents
Chapter One: Introduction to Moʻolelo Ea O Nā Hawaiʻi, Native Hawaiian Governance in Hawaiʻi ............................................................................................................................................... 15
He Pule Ola Hawaii......................................................................................................................................... 15 Overview ........................................................................................................................................................... 15 Settlement and Early Hawaiian Social System: A.D. 300 - 1000 [600 B.C. – A.D. 300] .......... 21 Governance by District Chiefs: A.D. 1000- 1500 [A.D. 300 – 1200] ............................................. 23 Four Island Chiefdoms: A.D. 1500 – 1810 [A.D. 1200 - 1810] ....................................................... 24 Federated Central Government Under a Monarchy: 1810 – 1839 ............................................... 25 Hawaiian Constitutional Monarchy: 1839 – 1893 .............................................................................. 27 Persistence of Cultural and Spiritual Beliefs and Practices ............................................................ 29 Hawaiian Nationalist Opposition to American Colonization of Hawaiʻi ..................................... 31 Provisional Government, Republic, Territory of Hawaiʻi: 1893 – 1921 ..................................... 33 Coup d'État ........................................................................................................................................................ 34 Hawaiian National Organizations Support the Constitutional Monarchy ................................. 35 Hawaiian National Organizations Defeat the McKinley Treaty of Annexation ........................ 38 The United States Extends Sovereign Domain Over Hawaiʻi .......................................................... 39 Native Hawaiian National Organizations of Self-Governance ........................................................ 40 Territory of Hawaiʻi: 1921 – 1959 ........................................................................................................... 43 Hawaiian National and Cultural Identity During the Territorial Period ................................... 45 Continuing Recognition of Native Hawaiians as a Distinct Native People ................................. 47 Native Hawaiian Organizations of Governance ................................................................................... 50 Recognition of Native Hawaiian Self-Determination and Governance ....................................... 53 Native Hawaiian Renaissance and Reaffirmation as a Distinct People ...................................... 59 Summary ........................................................................................................................................................... 60
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Chapter One: Introduction to Moʻolelo Ea O Nā Hawaiʻi, Native Hawaiian Governance in Hawaiʻi
He Pule Ola Hawaii
O ke au i kahuli wela ka honua, O ke au i kahuli lole ka Lani,
E hoomalamalama i ka malama O ke au ia Makalii ka po,
O ke au i Ku-kai-aku ka la, O ka walewale hookumu honua ia,
O ke kumu o ka lipo i lipo ai, O ke kumu o ka po i po ai, O ka lipolipo, o ka lipolipo,
O ka lipo o ka la, o kalipo o ka po, Po-wale-ho-i-e
Hanau ka po ia Hawaii He Aupuni Moi
Prayer for the Life of Hawaiʻi
When space turned around, the earth heated When space turned over, the sky reversed To cause light to make bright the moon,
When the Pleiades are small eyes in the night, When the sun appeared standing in shadows
From the source in the slime was the earth formed From the source in the dark was darkness formed
From the source in the night was night formed From the depths of the darkness, darkness so deep
Darkness of day, darkness of night Of night alone
Night gave birth to Hawaiʻi A Kingdom
Ke Aloha Aina, July 3, 1897, p. 5
Overview
This moʻolelo, a history, in the Hawaiian sense a succession of knowledge passed on orally
from one generation to the next, is a story recounting the history of governance in Hawaiʻi from
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one generation to the next of Native Hawaiian leaders, until the present. It unfolds as a
genealogy, tracing the governance by Native Hawaiian leaders from the first generations of
district chiefs through the current generation of national leaders of Hawaiian organizations of
self-governance. We open this history with a “Prayer for the Life of Hawaiʻi” that was published
in the nationalist newspaper, Ke Aloha Aina (Love for the Land and Nation) on July 3, 1897,
when Native Hawaiians were organizing to preserve the life of their nation, Hawaiʻi, from
annexation by the United States. Significantly, the composer begins the prayer with the first 11
lines of the Kumulipo, the chant that celebrates the creation of the universe and provides the
genealogy of the last two reigning monarchs of the Hawaiian Kingdom and Constitutional
Monarchy, King David Kalākaua and his sister Queen Lydia Kamakaʻeha Liliʻuokalani. In this
prayer, the universe gives birth to Hawaiʻi and to its government, the Kingdom, reinforcing the
underlying fundamental principle that Native Hawaiian governance is integrally linked with the
genealogical succession of Native Hawaiian chiefs in general, and Queen Liliʻuokalani in
particular, who descend from the omnipotent life force of the universe. This story of Native
Hawaiian governance provides a comprehensive history to elucidate four important facts that are
integral to the recognition of the right of self-governance of Native Hawaiians.
The first important fact is that Nā Kānaka Hawaiʻi ʻŌiwi Maoli, Native Hawaiians, are
the native, indigenous, aboriginal people of Ka Pae ‘Āina Hawai‘i (the Hawaiian Archipelago)
and have a distinct language, culture, history and ancestral land base.29
29 Noenoe Silva, Aloha Betrayed: Native Hawaiian Resistance to American Colonialism (Durham: Duke Univ. Press, 2004), p. 161. Silva notes that in a Memorial to President William McKinley on August 6, 1898 through U.S. Minister Harold Sewall, sent by Native Hawaiian nationalists to protest the Joint Resolution to Provide for Annexing the Hawaiian Islands to the United States, four strong words were used in the Hawaiian version and translated as "native Hawaiians" in the English version- kanaka, Hawaii, oiwi, maoli.
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The second important fact is that Native Hawaiians exercised sovereignty over the islands
that now comprise the State of Hawai‘i for centuries prior to the formation of the United States
government.
The third important fact is that for at least a thousand years, and likely quite longer,
continuing until today, Native Hawaiians have continuously exercised forms of governance and
self-governance in Hawai‘i that are rooted in inherent Native Hawaiian sovereignty.30
The fourth important fact is that beginning in the late 1800's and continuing to present,
Native Hawaiian self-governance has become distinct from the governance of Hawaiʻi and its
multi-ethnic population.
Native Hawaiians, are the aboriginal, indigenous people who settled the Hawaiian
archipelago, founded the Hawaiian nation and exercised sovereignty over the islands that
subsequently became the Hawaiian Kingdom and Constitutional Monarchy, the Republic of
Hawai‘i, the Territory of Hawai‘i and the State of Hawai‘i. Every legitimate form of historical
methodology, documentation and archaeological investigation, including Hawaiian oral histories,
chants and genealogies, substantiates this fact. 31 Most recently, the findings of the Hawaiʻi
30 Hawaiian historian and genealogist Lilikalā Kameʻeleihiwa’s study of the Hawaiian genealogy chant of creation, The Kumulipo has led her to conclude that Native Hawaiian governance by ruling chiefs began 100 generations or 2,000 years Before Present (BP). Lilikalā Kameʻeleihiwa “Hawaiʻi-nui-akea Cousins: Ancestral Gods and Bodies of Knowledge are Treasures for the Descendants,” in Te Kaharoa e-Journal, Vol. 2 (2009), p. 45. See also Joseph Mokuohai Poepoe, “Moolelo Hawaii Kahiko” in Ka Nai Aupuni, April 21-30, 1906. 31 See generally, Samuel Manaiakalani Kamakau, Ruling Chiefs of Hawaiʻi (Honolulu: Kamehameha Schools Press, 1961); Samuel Manaiakalani Kamakau, Ka Poʻe Kahiko: The People of Old (Honolulu: Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum Press, 1992); Samuel Manaiakalani Kamakau, Na Hana A Ka Poʻe Kahiko: The Works of the People of Old (Honolulu: Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum Press, 1992); Davida Malo, Hawaiian Antiquities (Dr. Nathaniel B. Emerson trans., 1898) (Honolulu: Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum Press, 1951); E.S. Craighill Handy, Elizabeth Green Handy & Mary Kawena Pukui, Native Planters in Old Hawaii: Their Life, Lore, and Environment (Honolulu: Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum Press, 1991) Patrick V. Kirch, Feathered Gods and Fishhooks: An Introduction to Hawaiian Archaeology and Prehistory (Honolulu: Univ. of Hawaii Press, 1985); Abraham Fornander, Fornander Collection
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Legislature in Act 195 (2011) also affirmed that the Native Hawaiian people are the “only
indigenous, aboriginal, maoli people” of Hawaiʻi.32
Therefore, like American Indian and Alaska Native peoples, Native Hawaiians are a
distinct, indigenous, Native people that lived in and exercised sovereignty over territory within
the asserted boundaries of the United States for centuries prior to European contact and the
formation of the federal government. Moreover, Native Hawaiians continue to maintain a
national identity as a distinct people with a unique language, history, culture and ancestral land
base.
Originally, as this moʻolelo will recount, from the emergence of district chiefs by A.D.
1000 and through the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom and Constitutional Government in
1893, the governance of Hawaiʻi and the self-governance of Nā Kānaka Maoli (Native
Hawaiians) were one and the same.
In 1893, the self-proclaimed Provisional Government and Republic of Hawaiʻi, supported
by the U.S. military, usurped the democratic governance of Hawaiʻi by Queen Liliʻuokalani, the
lawful chief executive of the Hawaiian Kingdom and Constitutional Government. Native
Hawaiians exercised self-governance independent of those self-proclaimed governments by
organizing to prevent the annexation of Hawaiʻi by the U.S. government and to seek the
reinstatement of the queen as the leader of Hawaiʻi's government. As of the 1890 census, Native
Hawaiians comprised 85 percent of the citizens of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi, 33 but only 45
of Hawaiian Antiquities and Folklore Vol. IV and VI (Honolulu: Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum Press, 1912); Abraham Fornander, An Account of the Polynesian Race: Its Origins and Migrations, Ancient History of the Hawaiian People to the Times of Kamehameha I Vols. I - III (Rutland: Charles E Tuttle, 1969); Martha Warren Beckwith, The Kumulipo: A Hawaiian Creation Chant (Honolulu: Univ. Press of Hawaii, 1972). 32 Act of July 6, 2011, No. 195, §§ 1-2, 2011 Hawaiʻi Session Laws (codified at Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes Chap. 10H). 33 Robert Schmitt, Demographic Statistics of Hawaii: 1778-1965 (Honolulu: Univ. of Hawaii
19
percent of the resident population. Moreover, Native Hawaiian men comprised seventy percent
of the registered male voters.34
Throughout the period of governance of Hawaiʻi as an incorporated territory of the U.S.,
from 1900 through 1959, Native Hawaiians continued to decline as a percentage of the resident
population, although they still comprised the majority of the registered voters through 1930.35
Native Hawaiians actively participated in territorial politics and contended for control over the
governance of Hawaiʻi with the oligarchy of American businessmen and planters who controlled
the territorial government. At the same time, Native Hawaiians also recognized the need to
organize new political, civic, and benevolent organizations in order to provide for the well-being
of the Native Hawaiian people and to protect Native Hawaiian lands, rights and trust assets.
These organizations eventually assumed the rudimentary functions of a government for the
Native Hawaiian people, who were acknowledged to be an indigenous people of a U.S. insular Press, 1968), Table 16, p. 74. The 1890 census listed nationality and not citizenship. The calculation for the number of citizens includes the categories: Natives, Half castes and Hawaiian-born foreigners. In 1890, there were 34,436 Natives and 6,186 Half castes, totaling 40,622 Native Hawaiians. There were 7,495 Hawaiian-born foreigners. Therefore, the total number of citizens was 48,117 of which Native Hawaiians comprised 85 percent. There were 41,873 foreigners living in Hawaiʻi and the total population was 89,990, with Native Hawaiians comprising forty-five percent of the total population. 34 This is discussed below in Chapter 6. See Census of the Hawaiian Islands, 1890 regarding percentage of Native Hawaiians in the population. Regarding registered voters, U.S. House of Representatives, 53rd Congress, 3d Session, Ex. Doc. No. 1, Part 1, App. II, Foreign Relations of the United States 1894, Affairs in Hawaii (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1895) (hereinafter Affairs in Hawaii), available at http://libweb.hawaii.edu/digicoll/annexation/blount.html (last viewed August 1, 2014), p. 598; “The Census of 1890 by Age and Nationality, Showing Number of Registered Voters,” cited in Thos. G. Thrum, Hawaiian Almanac and Annual for 1893. A Handbook of Information (Honolulu: Press Publishing Co. 1892), p. 14. 35 This is discussed in more detail below in Chapter 8. For percentage of the population see U.S. Bureau of the Census 15th Census of the United States: 1930, Population Second Series, Hawai'i: Composition and Characteristics of the Population and Unemployment (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1931), p. 48, Table 2 for Composition and Characteristics of Population. For Voter Registration data see Hawai'i (Territory) Governor of the Territory of Hawaii, Report to Secretary of Interior, 1931 (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1931), p. 14.
20
territory.36 Under the framework of U.S. law, the U.S. Executive and Congress developed one set
of laws and policies for the governance of Hawaiʻi and its multi-ethnic residents as a territory
and another set of laws and policies that recognized Native Hawaiians as an indigenous people
with the right of self-governance and with whom the U.S. had a special a trust relationship.
Through these processes and over the course of the territorial period and then statehood, the
governance of Hawaiʻi and the self-governance of Nā Kānaka Maoli (Native Hawaiians) have
become distinct.37
The governance of Hawaiʻi in the 21st century is exercised on behalf of the multi-ethnic
people who are descendants of and are themselves born and raised in Hawaiʻi, such as President
Barack Obama. It has also become inclusive of persons who establish residency in the Hawaiian
Islands. The self-governance of Nā Kānaka Maoli is exercised on behalf of individuals who are
descendants “of the aboriginal people who, prior to 1778, occupied and exercised sovereignty in
the area that now constitutes the State of Hawaii.”38
Ancestry and genealogy is at the core of Native Hawaiian national identity. Genealogy
connects Native Hawaiians to each other as a People whose collective indigenous ancestors
developed the first society to establish sovereignty over the Hawaiian Archipelago no less than
six and perhaps as many as eight centuries prior to European contact in 1778. The Kumulipo
Genealogy identifies 100 generations of Hawaiian rulers over twenty, and perhaps as many as
twenty-three, centuries prior to 1778.39 Genealogy is a cultural and political relationship that
36 These dynamics and processes are discussed below in Chapters 8 and 9. 37 These laws and policies are described below in Chapters 8 and 9. 38 This is the definition of Native Hawaiian in the Joint Resolution to Acknowledge the 100th Anniversary of the January 17, 1893 Overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawai‘i, Pub. L. No. 103-150, 107 Stat. 1510 (1993) 39 Martha Beckwith The Kumulipo, A Hawaiian Creation Chant (Honolulu: Univ. Press of Hawaii, 1951); Lilikalā Kameʻeleihiwa, “Kumulipo: A Cosmogonic Guide to Decolonization and Indigenization” in International Indigenous Journal of Entrepeneurship, Advancement,
21
locates Native Hawaiians within their homeland at the first critical point of the establishment of a
social and political system in the Hawaiian Islands. Given the centrality of genealogy to national
identity, this moʻolelo will trace the genealogy of Native Hawaiian governance over the
Hawaiian Islands through generations of chiefly rulers and national leaders and organizations of
self-governance.
This chapter provides an overview of the longer moʻolelo of Native Hawaiian governance
throughout the centuries, which is elaborated in much greater detail in the chapters that follow.
The four central themes of the moʻolelo are emphasized throughout - the distinct language,
culture, history and ancestral land base of the Native Hawaiian people; the exercise of
indigenous sovereignty prior to European or American contact; the continuing exercise of forms
of self-governance, both formal and informal; and the distinctiveness of Native Hawaiian self-
governance from the more general governance of Hawaiʻi. These themes are developed
chronologically and represented in Western (Gregorian) time as well as in the estimated number
of generations of national leaders, beginning from the emergence and organization of Hawaiian
society under district ruling aliʻi or chiefs, to present.
Settlement and Early Hawaiian Social System: A.D. 300 - 1000 [600 B.C. – A.D. 300]40
The discoverty, settlement and evolution of complex social and political social systems
throughout the Pacific have engaged scholars for the past 150 years. 41 According to these
sources, Hawaiʻi began to be settled during a colonization period of A.D. 300 - 600 by
Strategy & Education, WIPCE 2005 Special Edition. (Hamilton: Te Wananga o Aotearoa, Vol. 1, Issue 1), pp. 119 - 130. 40 Lilikalā Kameʻeleihiwa, "Hawaiʻi-nui-akea Cousins," p. 46–49; David Stannard, Before the Horror (Honolulu, Univ. of Hawaiʻi Press, 1989) 41 See Patrick V. Kirch, “When Did the Polynesians Settle Hawaiʻi? A Review of 150 Years of Scholarly Inquiry and a Tentative Answer,” 16 Hawaiian Archaeology 3-26 (2011).
22
Polynesians who are believed to have come from the nearest occupied archipelago, the
Marquesas. 42 This discovery and settlement of Hawaiʻi and subsequent development of a
distinctively Native Hawaiian social system is believed to have unfolded over six to seven
centuries prior to the emergence of a system of governance by district chiefs. From A.D. 600 -
1000, a core ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi (Native Hawaiian language) and Nā ʻIke a me Nā Hana Hawaiʻi
(Native Hawaiian culture) emerged as unique and distinct from that of the Polynesian homeland.
The social system was organized around communal subsistence production in which large ʻohana
(extended families) engaged in cooperative work and shared the fruits of their labor. Recent
research by Hawaiian historian and genealogist Professor Lilikalā Kameʻeleihiwa, delving into
the Kumulipo genealogy and the genealogies and moʻolelo or histories of other Polynesian
peoples, has led her to place the development of the early Hawaiian social system between 600
B.C., the time of the ruling chief Palikū, and A.D. 300, the time of Wākea (who is credited with
the development of the kapu or restrictions relative to the heiau or temples, the state religion and
the ʻAi Kapu or sacred eating restrictions). Her research of ancestral genealogies and moʻolelo
and her direct experience with the voyages of the Hōkūleʻa double-hulled canoe have led her to
place the origin of the Hawaiʻi migrations of settlement in Tahiti, rather than the Marquesas. In
order to benefit from the depth, richness and nuances of both approaches and methods of
calculation, two sets of dates are represented in the presentation of the pre-Kamehameha history,
with the more recent range of dates, followed, in brackets, by the earlier range of dates.
42 This early and long chronology is best summarized and described in Kirch, Feathered Gods and Fishhooks and Anahulu: The Anthropology of History in the Kingdom of Hawaii (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 1994).
23
Governance by District Chiefs: A.D. 1000- 1500 [A.D. 300 – 1200]
Native Hawaiian Governance through District Chiefs43
Generations 1–14
By A.D. 1000, according to Dr. Carolyn Kēhaunani Cachola Abad, ruling chiefs emerged
in every district on each island and assumed stewardship over the land. They undertook the
responsibility of organizing the makaʻāinana (common people) to develop an infrastructure of
irrigation networks, roads and fishponds to enable the intensification of the production of food
and basic necessities to support a rapidly expanding population.
The landscapes of Hawaiʻi bear the imprint of the historic development of a sophisticated
social system organized around the cultivation of the land and the ocean. Cultivated fields,
complex irrigation networks and large fishponds within each ahupuaʻa (watershed management
units) reflected the industry and skill of the common people working together as ʻohana and
under the oversight of konohiki (chiefly stewards) on behalf of their district chiefs.
According to the Native Hawaiian genealogies and oral traditions, this era of rapid
expansion of the population and the development of the infrastructure corresponded to a new
43 The estimate of the generations of Native Hawaiian rulers and the approximate years that they ruled is based on Dr. Carolyn Kēhaunani Cachola Abad’s analysis of Hawaiʻi chiefs, from the last set who migrated from Tahiti to Hawaiʻi, forward to King Kamehameha I in “The Evolution of Hawaiian Socio-Political Complexity: An Analysis of Hawaiian Oral Traditions” (Univ of Hawaiʻi Unpublished Dissertation, 2000). Chiefly genealogies trace the origins of Hawaiian rulers deeper in time. For example, Fornander, in An Account of the Polynesian Race places the chief that Abad selected as generation One (1) in her study, as a descendant of 29 generations of ruling chiefs in the Ulu line who preceded him. The Kumulipo Genealogy, traces the Kalākaua Dynasty back to the origin of the universe itself. Professor Kameʻeleihiwa, using the Kumulipo as her main source of ancestral documentation identifies the first generation ruling chief as Palikū in 600 B.C. and does not distinguish a period of rule by district chiefs as distinct from the rule of the chiefs of each island, as does Abad. Out of respect for the Hawaiian ancestral genealogy, the generation of ruling chiefs and the years of their rule are identifed in brackets throughout the next sections. See Appendix 1. Genealogies of the Ruling Chiefs of the Four Hawaiian Chiefdoms: Hawaiʻi, Maui, Oʻahu, Kauaʻi.
24
wave of migration from Tahiti. These dynamic developments were further stimulated by
religious and political innovations introduced by an emerging class of ruling chiefs, some of
whom were indigenous to Hawaiʻi and some of whom migrated to Hawaiʻi from Tahiti during
this period.44
Within this time frame, the voyaging of chiefs and priests between Hawaiʻi and Tahiti
stopped around A.D. 1400, and the Native Hawaiian social system again developed in isolation
from external influences over the next two centuries.45
Four Island Chiefdoms: A.D. 1500 – 1810 [A.D. 1200 - 1810]
Native Hawaiian Governance through Aliʻi Nui (High Chiefs of Islands) and the
ʻAha Aliʻi (Councils of Chiefs)
Generations 14–23 [Generations 89 - 119]
The next period, A.D. 1500 - 1810, is referred to as the Proto-Historic Period. During this
period, there were four distinct chiefdoms (Hawaiʻi, Maui, Oʻahu, Kauaʻi) ruled by four aliʻi nui
44 See generally, Ross Cordy, Exahalted Sits the Chief: Ancient History of Hawaii Island (Honolulu: Mutual Publishing, 2000). 45 The sources cited in footnote 31 place the end of transpacific voyaging between 1250 and 1400. Personal communication with Ben Finney, Professor Emeritus of Cultural Anthropology, Univ. of Hawaiʻi - Mānoa affirmed this (April 6, 2003). According to Finney, once there was a critical mass of people and technology in Hawaiʻi, there was no great need to commit the vast resources needed to support long range voyaging. The resources of the chiefs were instead used to oppose other chiefs and expand the territory under their control. The book, Ancient Tahiti by Teuira Henry (Honolulu: Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum, 1928), pp. 119-128, provides an account of how the voyaging temple on the island of Taputapuatea, in Tahiti played a critical role in the transpacific voyages and that the murder of a priest from Aotearoa–New Zealand by a chief from Tahiti at that temple led to a kapu (prohibition) on the launching of the wayfinding voyages that were traditionally launched under the auspices of the priests of that temple. Finney’s book Sailing on the Wake of our Ancestors: Reviving Polynesian Voyaging (Honolulu: Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum Press, 2003), documents a 1995 ceremony at the temple at Taputapuatea to lift the prohibition. It was conducted by members of the Polynesian Voyaging Society of Hawaiʻi who revived transpacific wayfinding voyages in 1976 with the round trip voyage of the double-hulled canoe Hōkūleʻa from Hawaiʻi to Tahiti. Navigators from other Polynesian islands joined in the ceremony.
25
who continued to compete for control over districts and islands through inter-island alliances and
marriages, religious rituals and military conquest. Although the people of the chiefdoms shared a
common ancestry, language, and culture, the aliʻi nui (high chiefs of islands) and their ʻaha aliʻi
(councils of chiefs) ruled the individual islands as distinct yet interrelated realms. They had
organized these island societies to the point where it became possible in the late 18th century for
one paramount chief to consolidate and govern the chiefdoms as a federated interisland kingdom.
By 1795, one Aliʻi Nui, Kamehameha I, had conquered and unified all of the islands
under his central rule, except for Kauaʻi and Niʻihau. Subsequently, Kamehameha I gained the
allegiance of Kaumualiʻi, Aliʻi Nui of Kauaʻi and Niʻihau, and thus the entire archipelago was
united as the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi by 1810, under King Kamehameha I.
Federated Central Government Under a Monarchy: 1810 – 1839
Native Hawaiian Governance through a Monarch
Generation 23 [Generation 118] - King Kamehameha I 1810 - 1819
Generation 24 [Generation 119] - King Kamehameha II (Liholiho) 1819 - 1824
Generation 25 [Generation 120] - King Kamehameha III (Kauikeaouli) 1825 - 1839
Once King Kamehameha I gained control of the major Hawaiian Islands, he re-
established the ancestral custom of the ʻaha aliʻi, to provide advice and to ensure the proper
governance of the islands without reliance on warfare. The council of chiefs supervised the
division and management of land, the management of fisheries, the sandalwood trade and the
annual collection of taxes. Kamehameha also appointed governors for each island, in recognition
of the need for direct management of local affairs and as an accommodation to the unique nature
26
of the governance of geographically separated islands as a unified Kingdom. 46 The council
provided a constraint on the power of the mōʻī (head of state) and was an early indicator of the
democratic direction in which Native Hawaiian governance of the nation was moving.47
Kamehameha I died in 1819 and his son, Liholiho, took on the responsibility of
governance as Kamehameha II. At that point in time, the ʻAi Kapu practice and edicts that
defined the roles and interrelationship of men and women and the various classes of people with
each other, as well as the appropriate uses of the land, ocean and natural resources were formally
abandoned by Kamehameha II in an act called the ʻAi Noa.48 Following the ʻAi Noa, Calvinist
missionaries from New England arrived in Hawaiʻi and introduced a new religious belief system
that focused upon the salvation of humans and taught that humans were superior to the land and
other living creatures. Their teachings, laced with cultural condescension, were critical of the
cultural practices and traditional nature-based spiritual belief system of the Native Hawaiians.
Missionaries, together with the whalers and merchants, introduced commercial practices that
commodified and degraded cultural landscapes, competed with subsistence uses of the land and
resources and undermined the principled belief of the people in the sacred nature of ʻāina (land).
These contradictory philosophies and practices continued to be an undercurrent influencing the
competitive relations between the Native Hawaiian community and foreign residents. 46 Ralph S. Kuykendall, The Hawaiian Kingdom, Vol. I: 1778-1854 Foundation and Transformation (Honolulu: Univ. of Hawaii Press, 1938), pp. 53-54. 47 Kamakau, Ruling Chiefs, pp. 172-77; John Papa Ii, Fragments of Hawaiian History (Honolulu: Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum Press, 1973) p. 70; Stephen Desha, Kamehameha and His Warrior Kekūhaupiʻo (Frances Frazier trans.) (Honolulu: Kamehameha Schools Press, 2000), pp. 342, 451; Lilikalā Kameʻeleihiwa, Native Lands and Foreign Desires: Pehea Lā E Pono Ai? (Honolulu: Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum Press, 1992), pp. 58, 111-112. 48 Kamakau, Ruling Chiefs, pp. 219-228; Kameʻeleihiwa, Native Land and Foreign Desires, pp. 67-94; Marshall Sahlins, Historical Metaphors and Mythical Realities: Structure in the Early History of the Sandwich Islands Kingdom (Ann Arbor: Univ. of Michigan, l981), pp. 55-64; David Kalakaua King of Hawaiʻi, Legends and Myths of Hawaii (Rutland, VT: C.E. Tuttle Co., 1972), pp. 429-446; William Davenport, “The Hawaiian ‘Cultural Revolution’: Some Economic and Political Considerations,” American Anthropologist, LXXI, 1969, pp. 1-20.
27
Kauikeaouli, the son of Kamehameha I and brother of Kamehameha II, officially became
king as Kamehameha III in 1825. However, he was a young boy, so Kaʻahumanu, the Kuhina
Nui (regent/premier), and Kalanimōkū, the Kālaimoku (minister/counselor) of the Kingdom
under Kamehameha II, continued to rule. Kaʻahumanu and Kalanimōkū navigated through
increasingly complex and sometimes hostile relationships with merchants, seaman and
emissaries of the great powers. In fulfilling their traditional roles as aliʻi, they sought to ensure
the survival of the Kingdom and their people amid difficult and massive political and social
changes. Kamehameha III assumed the full authority of his office in 1832, upon Kaʻahumanu’s
death.
Hawaiian Constitutional Monarchy: 1839 – 1893
Native Hawaiian Governance through a Constitutional Monarchy
Generation 25 [Generation 120] - King Kamehameha III (Kauikeaouli) 1839 - 1854
Generation 26 [Generation 121] - King Kamehameha IV (Alexander Liholiho) 1855 - 1863
Generation 27 [Generation 122] - King Kamehameha V (Lota Kapuaiwa) 1863 - 1872
Generation 28 [Generation 123] - King William Charles Lunalilo 1873 - 1874
Generation 29 [Generation 124] - King David Kalākaua 1874 - 1891
Generation 30 [Generation 125] - Queen Liliʻuokalani 1891 - 1893
Kamehameha III, along with his Council of Chiefs and foreign advisors, realized that in
order to maintain its independence, the Kingdom’s governance structure should be firmly
established in a written form. Thus, on June 7, 1839, King Kamehameha III proclaimed the
Declaration of Rights, imposing restraints on the government and recognizing individual and
28
communal rights of the chiefs and the common people.49 Within a year, the Declaration was
incorporated and transformed into Hawai‘i’s first Constitution. The Constitution of 1840
established three branches of government: (1) The King as the chief executive, responsible for
foreign affairs, with an appointed premier and four governors of the major islands; (2) A House of
Nobles, appointed by the King, and a House of Representatives, chosen by the people from
Hawai‘i, Maui, Oʻahu and Kauaʻi; and (3) a Judiciary with a Supreme Court and island judges
appointed by the island governors.50
Throughout the 19th century, the United States recognized the independence of the
Hawaiian Kingdom and extended diplomatic recognition to the Hawaiian government. The U.S.
entered into five agreements and treaties––in 1826, 1842, 1849, 1875 and 1887––with the
Hawaiian government relating to friendship, commerce and navigation.51 In 1842, U.S. President
John Tyler officially recognized Hawaiʻi as an independent nation and declared a policy of
maintaining Hawaiian independence.52 The Hawaiian Kingdom also entered into treaties and
received formal recognition as a sovereign, independent nation from nearly every major world
power.53
49 Kingdom of Hawaii Const. of 1840, in Translation of the Constitution and Laws of the Hawaiian Islands Established in the Reign of Kamehameha III (Lahainaluna, 1842), p. 9. 50 Id., pp. 11-20 (“Prerogatives of the King,” “Respecting the Premier of the Kingdom,” “House of Nobles,” “Respecting the Legislative Body,” “On the Judges”). 51 See for example, Treaty with Hawaii on Friendship, Commerce and Navigation, 9 Stat. 977 (1850); Convention Between the United States and His Majesty the King of the Hawaiian Islands, 19 Stat. 625 (1875); Supplementary Convention Between the United States of America and His Majesty the King of the Hawaiian Islands to Limit the Duration of the Convention Respecting Commercial Reciprocity Concluded January 30, 1875, 25 Stat. 1399 (1884). 52 House Doc. No. 35, 27th Cong., 3d Sess., Sandwich Islands and China, Message from the President of the United States (December 31, 1842), p. 2. A year later, on November 28, 1843, the British and French governments jointly recognized Hawaiian independence. 53 The treaties entered into by the Hawaiian Kingdom included the following countries: Austria-Hungary (June 18, 1875), Belgium (Oct. 4, 1862), Denmark (Oct. 19, 1846), Japan (Aug. 19, 1870), Portugal (May 5, 1882), Italy (July 22, 1863), The Netherlands (Oct. 14, 1862), Russia
29
The Hawaiian Kingdom and Constitutional Monarchy enjoyed its most prosperous and
renowned era as an independent nation from the reign of King Kamehameha IV (Alexander
Liholiho) (1854 - 1863) through that of Queen Liliʻuokalani (1891 - 1893). Hawaiʻi fully
exercised the status that it had attained within the international community of nations, a status
embraced and celebrated by Native Hawaiians through active participation in the political life of
the nation, as well as through civic and political organizations and the Hawaiian language
newspapers.
Persistence of Cultural and Spiritual Beliefs and Practices
Despite the breaking of the Kapu and official abandonment of the state religious system,
Native Hawaiians in the rural areas of Oʻahu and the neighbor islands, distant from the centers of
power, turned deeper into the preservation and practice of the essential elements of the Hawaiian
culture. They persisted in perpetuating their ‘ohana religious beliefs and spiritual values,
language, fishing practices, cultivation and stewardship of their ancestral lands, medical and
healing practices, stewardship of sacred sites and oral traditions, chants, music and dance. Men
and women knowledgeable in these customs passed on their knowledge, orally and, later,
through Hawaiian language newspapers, to succeeding generations. It was this form of cultural
perpetuation, primarily in the rural areas of the islands, isolated from the onslaught of missionary
teaching and actions that enabled the Native Hawaiian people to endure as a unique, distinct,
dignified people throughout the Constitutional Monarchy while resisting the influences of the
missionary culture and its political progeny.54
(June 19, 1869), Switzerland (July 20, 1864), Spain (Oct. 29, 1863) and Sweden (July 1, 1852). See Appendix 5 for a list of the treaties between the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi and other nations. 54 Davianna Pōmaikaʻi McGregor, Nā Kuaʻāina: Living Hawaiian Culture (Honolulu: Univ of Hawaiʻi Press, 2007).
30
Discernible threads in the evolution of the Native Hawaiian social and political culture
distinct from the Hawaiian monarchy began to form during the 1840s. Those seeking to live their
lives in customary fashion coalesced when necessary, through ad hoc or temporary
organizations, with other Native Hawaiians to express their resistance to government conduct.
For example, numerous Native Hawaiians signed petitions in 1845 against selling land to
foreigners, the appointment of foreigners to government offices, and the imposition of new
taxes.55
During this era, the King and the Council of Chiefs began to focus on protecting the
integrity of the government and the nation from the increasing demands of foreign residents and
threats to the independence of the nation from foreign governments. Protection of the natural
resources for the subsistence of the people; perpetuation of Native Hawaiian cultural and
spiritual beliefs, customs and practices; and holding the monarch and the council of chiefs
accountable for the care and well-being of the people, evolved into the province of the broader
classes. This included those descended from aliʻi, the kāhuna (scholarly, skilled and artisan
classes) and the makaʻāinana. Their continued exercise of traditional and customary beliefs,
customs and practices was recognized and incorporated into the land laws of the Kingdom and
Constitutional Monarchy. These actions, combined, account for the endurance of the Native
Hawaiian culture and national identity through the 20th century and its growth entering the 21st
century.56
55 Id. pp. 3, 12-14, 55-59 (July petition to Kamehameha III by 1600 commoners concerning “the independence of the kingdom,” and prohibiting foreigners to own land); see also Silva, Aloha Betrayed, pp. 38-9; E.S. Craighill Handy and Mary Kawena Pukui, The Polynesian Family System in Ka-ʻu, Hawaiʻi (Rutland, VT: Charles E. Tuttle, 1976), pp. 5-6. 56 See generally McGregor, Nā Kuaʻāina, documenting the perpetuation of customary and traditional practices in rural Hawaiian communities throughout the 19th and 20th centuries and the
31
Hawaiian Nationalist Opposition to American Colonization of Hawaiʻi
During the reign of King Lunalilo in 1873, American planters proposed that the Hawaiian
government turn over control of Puʻuloa (Pearl Harbor) to the U.S. government in order to gain
the support of the U.S. Congress for a reciprocal trade agreement. The threat of turning over
Hawaiian lands to the U.S. gave rise to a nationalist tide against the growing influence of
Americans, which would not recede. 57 The nationalist political movement intensified and
continued to gain momentum throughout the reign of King Kalākaua.
When the U.S.-Hawaiʻi Reciprocity Treaty of 1875 expired and King Kalākaua refused to
turn over control of Puʻuloa to the U.S. in order to renew the treaty, American planters and
foreign business interests formed the Hawaiian League. In alliance with the all-Caucasian 500-
man militia called the Honolulu Rifles, the Hawaiian League forced King Kalākaua to accept the
Constitution of 1887, known as the “Bayonet Constitution.”58 The Bayonet Constitution took the
executive power away from the King and placed it under a cabinet selected by the Hawaiian
League. It also disenfranchised many Native Hawaiians. 59 The cabinet voted to turn over
exclusive use of Pearl Habor to the U.S. government in return for the renewal of the U.S.-
significance of these communities in the 21st century revitalization of the Native Hawaiian language and culture. 57 Davianna McGregor-Alegado, Hawaiian Resistance: 1887-1889 (Univ.of Hawaiʻi, Mānoa: Unpublished M.A. Thesis, 1979), pp. 15-18. 58 Jon Van Dyke, Who Owns the Crown Lands of Hawaiʻi? (Honolulu: Univ.of Hawaiʻi Press, 2008), pp. 120-124. 59 For example, voting privileges were extended to American and European males regardless of citizenship. 1887 Constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom, art. 59 and art. 62. Property qualifications for vote for the House of Nobles were so high that many Native Hawaiians were disenfranchised from voting for that house of the legislature. Art. 59, provision 2 (setting property qualifications).
32
Hawaiʻi Reciprocity Treaty, and the King reluctantly signed the new treaty.60 The reorganized
government was called the Reform Government.
The 1887 “Bayonet Constitution” and the Reform Government became a rallying point
for the Hawaiian nationalist movement, which immediately organized mass meetings, circulated
petitions and sent delegations to the King asking him to abrogate the “Bayonet Constitution” and
dismiss the cabinet. These efforts failed.61
The most militant confrontation between Native Hawaiians nationalists and the Reform
Government over the “Bayonet Constitution” was the 1889 Wilcox Rebellion, which was
suppressed within eighteen hours.62 Following the failure of the rebellion, Native Hawaiians
nationalists utilized the electoral arena to achieve their goals. On November 22, 1888, between
500 and 1,500 Native Hawaiians met in Honolulu to form the Hui Kālaiʻāina (Hawaiian Political
Association). The Hui Kālaiʻāina persisted as the primary political organization of Native
Hawaiians into the early 20th century.63
In 1891, when Liliʻuokalani succeeded her brother to the throne and took her position as
Queen, the Hui Kālaiʻāina launched a massive petition drive appealing to the Queen to
promulgate a new constitution. They succeeded in getting 6,500 registered voters, two-thirds of
all registered voters, to sign. The Queen felt both compelled and empowered to abrogate the
60 Van Dyke, Crown Lands, pp. 124-128. 61 Queen Liliʻuokalani Diary, January 16, 17, 18, 1888; Cabinet Meetings 1887-1890 entry for January 18, 1888; Lorrin Thurston, Memoirs of the Hawaiian Revolution (Honolulu: Advertiser Publishing Co., Ltd, 1936), pp. 180-183; "Reply of Hon. R.W. Wilcox to Statements of Minister Thurston Before the Hawaiian Legislative Assembly," June 10, 1890 (Honolulu: Hawaiian Gazette Steam Print, 1890.) 62 Eight Native Hawaiians nationalists were killed, 12 wounded, and 70 arrested. Those nationalists charged with treason were subsequently acquitted by all-Native Hawaiian juries. McGregor-Alegado, Hawaiian Resistance, 1887-1889, pp. 76-107. 63 David William Earle, Coalition Politics in Hawaiʻi - 1887 - 90: Hui Kālaiʻāina and the Mechanics and Workingmenʻs Political Protective Union (Unpublished Masterʻs Thesis, University of Hawaiʻi, Mānoa, December 1993.), p. 75.
33
1887 Constitution in favor of a new constitution that would limit voting rights to Hawaiian born
and naturalized citizens and restore her power as the chief executive of the Hawaiian
government.64
Provisional Government, Republic, Territory of Hawaiʻi: 1893 – 1921
Native Hawaiian National Leaders Form Organizations of Self-Governance
Generation 30 [Generation 125] 1893 – 1917
Queen Liliʻuokalani
Hui Aloha ʻĀina (Hawaiian Patriotic League), Independent Homerule Party
Generation 31 [Generation 126] 1902 - 1921
Prince Jonah Kūhiō Kalanianaʻole, ‘Ahahui Puʻuhonua,
Hawaiian Civic Clubs, Hawaiian Royal Societies, Hawaiian Land Hui
From 1893 to 1900, non-native citizens and residents of the Hawaiian Kingdom, with the
backing of the U.S. government, usurped Native Hawaiian governance of Hawaiʻi and sought the
annexation of Hawaiʻi to the United States. Liliʻuokalani, the lawful Queen of the Hawaiian
Islands under the constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom, led the opposition against the takeover
of the Hawaiian government and annexation by the U.S. In addition to the Queen’s efforts, the
Native Hawaiian people and their political organizations vigorously protested annexation
through meetings, rallies, and petitions. They asserted the right of self-governance. There was an
armed attempt to restore the Queen as ruler. Native Hawaiians also organized several diplomatic
delegations to the U.S. to oppose annexation. These efforts succeeded in defeating the
ratification of any treaty to annex the Hawaiian Islands by the U.S. Congress.
64 Queen Liliuokalani, Hawaii’s Story by Hawaii’s Queen (Honolulu: Mutual Publishing, 1990),
p. 231.
34
Coup d'État
Using the Queen’s proposal for a new constitution as an excuse, American and European
sugar planters and businessmen, many of whom were descendants of American missionaries,
plotted to overthrow the monarchy.65 In their efforts, they sought and received the help of the
U.S. Minister to Hawaiʻi, John L. Stevens, an advocate of annexation. On January 16, 1893,
Stevens ordered U.S. marines to land in Honolulu under the pretext of protecting American lives
and property. The next day, January 17, 1893, the leaders of this coup d'état declared the
monarchy abolished and a provisional government established in its place.66
Queen Liliʻuokalani made a historic decision. With United States troops within yards of
the Palace assuring the coup d'état’s success, she ordered her own forces to stand down in order
to “avoid the loss of life,” and she sought the intercession of the President of the United States.
Her statement to the President opened this way:
I, Liliuokalani, by the grace of God and under the constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom, Queen, do hereby solemnly protest against any and all acts done against myself and the Constitutional Government of the Hawaiian Kingdom by certain persons claiming to have established a Provisional Government of and for this Kingdom.67
65 Thurston, Memoirs, p. 249. 66 U.S. House of Representatives, 53rd Congress, 2d Session, Exec. Doc. No. 47, President's Message to the Hawaiian Islands, December 18, 1893. Accompanied by Commissioner Blount's Report, the Evidence Taken by Him at Honolulu, the Instructions Given to both Commissioner Blount and Minister Willis and Correspondence Connected with the Affair (Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1893) (hereinafter referred to as Blount Report), pp iii-xvi; or in Affairs in Hawaii, pp. 445 - 458 (“The [Naval] military demonstration upon the soil of Hawaiʻi was of itself an act of war” in a city that “was in its customary orderly and peaceful condition.” Blount Report, p. ix; or in Affairs in Hawaii, p. 451); Proclamation of the Committee of Safety, January 17, 1893, reprinted in Fundamental Law of Hawaii (ed. Lorrin Thurston) (Honolulu: Hawaiian Gazette Co., Ltd., 1904), pp. 196-197; see also Neil Thomas Proto, The Rights of My People, Liliʻuokalani’s Enduring Battle With the United States 1893 - 1917 (New York: Algora Publishing, 2009), pp. 22-23. 67 Liliuokalani, Hawaii’s Story, p. 387.
35
The Queen yielded her authority not to the provisional government, but to the “superior
forces of the United States of America,” which she fully expected would, “upon the facts being
presented to it, undo the action of its representatives.”68 Although she moved out of ʻIolani
Palace, she was still Hawai‘i’s legitimate chief executive, but no longer in control of the formal
apparatus of government. For the Native Hawaiian people, Liliʻuokalani remained the queen and
ruler of the Native Hawaiian people and the embodiment of the Native Hawaiian government
until her death in November 1917.
Hawaiian National Organizations Support the Constitutional Monarchy
Despite the fact that the coup d'état took place in Honolulu and news of the coup took
days to reach the neighbor islands, Native Hawaiian resistance to the coup and the possibility of
annexation to the United States formed immediately. Political organizations and groups already
in existence on every island, such as the Hui Kālaiʻāina and the newly formed Hui Aloha ʻĀina
(Hawaiian Patriotic League), began to advocate support for the Queen and the constitutional
monarchy. They joined together with other Hawaiian political clubs to form the Men’s and
Women’s Hawaiian Patriotic Leagues whose primary objectives were to maintain the
independent autonomy of Hawaiʻi and secure the civil rights of the Native Hawaiian people. The
Men’s Patriotic League represented 7,500 Native Hawaiian qualified voters and the Women’s
Patriotic League represented 11,000 women.69
In 1894, Emma and Joseph Nāwahī started to publish the newspaper, Ke Aloha Aina,
continuing the Native Hawaiian newspaper tradition begun in the 1860s. For the next 26 years –
68 Helen G. Allen, The Betrayal of Liliuokalani: Last Queen of Hawaii, 1838 - 1917 (Honolulu: Mutual Publishing, 1998), p. 294; see also Liliuokalani, Hawaii’s Story, App. B., pp. 387-388; President’s Message Relating to the Hawaiian Islands, p. XIX. 69 Noenoe Silva, Aloha Betrayed: Native Hawaiian Resistance to American Colonialism (Durham: Duke Univ. Press, 2004), pp. 131, 136-163.
36
until 1920 – Ke Aloha ‘Āina remained a central vehicle for the publication of Native Hawaiian
political positions, cultural histories and chants, and community, island and international news.70
The effort by American interests to annex Hawai‘i in 1893 failed when U.S. President
Grover Cleveland, who had succeeded Benjamin Harrison as president, withdrew the annexation
treaty from consideration by the U.S. Senate and dispatched former Georgia Congressman James
Blount to Hawaiʻi to investigate the events of January 1893.
The Hawaiian Patriotic Leagues and others organized rallies and meetings and an
assembly in Honolulu. Native Hawaiian newspapers in Hawaiian and English throughout the
islands, in existence since the 1860s, continued to express thoughtful, soundly based arguments
in support of the constitutional changes that Queen Liliʻuokalani embraced. They also strongly
opposed annexation. The Hawaiian Patriotic Leagues, in particular, submitted testimonies and
petitions to Commissioner James Blount, which had a significant impact on his findings
supporting the Queen. Through collective action, drawing on precisely the traditions of family
and community and cultural perpetuation that characterized their history, Native Hawaiians
continued to govern themselves separate from the self-declared Provisional Government.71
After receiving Blount’s report, President Cleveland determined that the United States
had been responsible for the overthrow of the monarchy. In a forceful and moving message to
Congress, Cleveland recommended restoration of the monarchy and declared:
[I]f a feeble but friendly state is in danger of being robbed of its independence and its sovereignty by a misuse of the name and power of the United States, the United States can not fail to vindicate its honor and its sense of justice by an earnest effort to make all possible reparation.72
70 Id., pp. 139-142; Ernest Andrade, Jr., Unconquerable Rebel: Robert W. Wilcox and Hawaiian Politics, 1880 - 1903 (Niwot, CO: Univ. Press of Colorado, 1996), p. 194. 71 Id., pp. 130-134. 72 Blount Report, p. XX; Affairs in Hawaii, p. 462.
37
Since annexation was not possible with Cleveland in office, on July 4, 1894, the
Provisional Government declared itself to be the Republic of Hawai‘i with a constitution that
named Sanford Dole as president.73 It was clear, however, that Native Hawaiians did not support
the Republic, evidenced by the fact that only 509 Native Hawaiians took the oath of allegiance to
the Republic’s constitution in 1894. This should be contrasted to the 9,554 Native Hawaiians
who were registered to vote in 1890.74 Even by 1897, only 1,126 Native Hawaiians actually
voted in elections for representatives to the Republic’s legislature.75 The Republic could not
rightfully claim to represent the Native Hawaiian people.
In January of 1895, those loyal to Queen Lili‘uokalani attempted to regain control of the
government.76 Nationalists organized an armed insurrection aimed at restoring the Queen to the
throne. However, despite months of planning, the restoration effort was defeated just as it was
about to be launched. In all, 220 nationalists were arrested and charged as prisoners of war for
treason and concealment of treason. The Queen herself was arrested, tried and found guilty of
misprision of or concealment of treason.77
On January 24, 1895, while imprisoned in ʻIolani Palace, Queen Liliʻuokalani was forced
to sign a statement of abdication in favor of the Republic.78 The arrests, trials and imprisonment
of the royalists effectively suppressed all armed efforts to restore the monarchy. Nevertheless, 73 William Adam Russ, Jr., The Hawaiian Republic (1894-1898) And Its Struggle to Win Annexation (Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania: Susquehanna Univ. Press, 1961), p. 36. 74 See Affairs in Hawaii, p. 598; "The Census of 1890 by Age and Nationality, Showing Number of Registered Voters," cited in Thos. G. Thrum, Hawaiian Almanac and Annual for 1893. A Handbook of Information (Honolulu: Press Publishing Co. 1892), p. 14. 75 See Van Dyke, Crown Lands, p. 185; 56th Cong., 1st Sess., House Rep. No. 305 to accompany H.R.2972, Government for the Territory of Hawaii, Comm. on Territories, 56th Cong., 1st Sess., Feb. 12, 1900, p. 9. 76 See Russ, The Hawaiian Republic, pp. 55-57. 77 Allen, Betrayal of Queen Liliuokalani, pp. 331-350. 78 Subsequently, the Queen renounced the statement, explaining that she had been coerced into signing it in order to save her arrested supporters from execution. Liliuokalani, Hawaii’s Story, p. 274.
38
Native Hawaiians persisted in their opposition to annexation through rallies, meetings, petitions,
newspapers, songs and publications.79
Hawaiian National Organizations Defeat the McKinley Treaty of Annexation
The Queen’s movement was restricted for almost two years, but once granted freedom to
travel, the Queen immediately went to Washington, D.C. to lobby against the annexation of
Hawaiʻi. She wrote a book, Hawaii’s Story by Hawaii’s Queen, as an appeal to the hearts and
minds of the American people to oppose the annexation of Hawaiʻi and to support her restoration
as Queen and the rightful leader of the Kingdom and Constitutional Monarchy of Hawaiʻi.
A Hawaiian delegation joined Queen Liliʻuokalani in Washington, D.C. to represent the
views of the Hawaiian people on McKinley’s annexation treaty. They carried two sets of
petitions, gathered by the Hui Aloha ‘Āina and Hui Kālai‘āina, with almost 38,000 signatures
against annexation.80 Although there appeared to be almost enough votes in the Senate to ratify
the treaty, the delegation and the Queen, with the aid of sympathetic U.S. senators, successfully
79 For one example, see F.J. Testa, Buke Mele Lahui—Book of National Songs (Honolulu: Paiia ma ka Halepai Makaainana, 1895), (reprinted: Honolulu: Univ. of Hawaiʻi Press, Hawaiian Historical Society, Hawaiian Language Reprint Series, 2003), containing patriotic songs honoring the Queen and those who defended her. In September and October 1897, Senator John Morgan, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and four Congressmen traveled to Hawaiʻi to rally support for a treaty of annexation that the Republic of Hawaiʻi had negotiated with President McKinley. They met mass opposition as thousands of Native Hawaiians rallied at Palace Square against the treaty. 80 Silva, Aloha Betrayed, pp. 157-159. The four members of the delegation were John Richardson, William Auld, James Kaulia and David Kalauokalani. The Hawaiʻi delegation, in consultation with Queen Lili‘uokalani, made the decision to submit only the Hui Aloha ‘Āina’s petitions because “they did not want to appear divided or as if they had different goals.” David Kalauokalani, representing the 17,000 people who had signed the Hui Kālai‘āina’s petitions, formally endorsed the Hui Aloha ‘Āina’s petitions.
39
defeated the treaty.81 No treaty for the annexation of Hawaiʻi has ever been ratified by the U.S.
Senate or signed by a U.S. President.
The United States Extends Sovereign Domain Over Hawaiʻi
On May 4, 1898, Representative Francis G. Newlands of Nevada introduced a joint
resolution of annexation in the House of Representatives, which incorporated the language of the
failed 1897 treaty of annexation. The constitutionality of annexing a territory by way of
resolution rather than by treaty was hotly debated in the U.S. Congress.82 Nevertheless, both the
House and Senate approved the Joint Resolution by a simple majority. On July 7, 1898, President
McKinley signed the resolution.
The formal transfer of the sovereignty of the Republic of Hawaiʻi occurred in ceremonies
on August 12, 1898, at ʻIolani Palace. The Joint Resolution of Annexation also transferred the
title to Hawaiʻi’s public lands, as claimed by the Republic of Hawaiʻi, to the United States.83
81 Id. 82 Joint Resolution to Provide for Annexing the Hawaiian Islands to the United States, J. Res. 55, 55th Cong., 30 Stat. 750 (1898) (hereinafter Joint Resolution). The primary argument against the resolution was that the United States could gain territory only through the constitutional treaty-making power. To acquire Hawaiʻi by a legislative act would usurp the power of the Senate and Executive and set a dangerous precedent. Annexationists pointed to the acquisition of Texas in 1845 by joint resolution as precedent, but Texas had been brought into the Union under Congressional power to admit new states. Statehood was not proposed for Hawaiʻi. Moreover, the Texas joint resolution was approved by a plebiscite held in Texas, but no plebiscite was proposed for Hawaiʻi. An amendment to the Newlands measure providing for such a vote by all adult males was defeated. Native Hawaiian Rights Handbook, p. 15, n. 100. 83 Clauses 25, 28 and 29 of the Joint Resolution to Acknowledge the 100th Anniversary of the January 17, 1893 Overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawai‘i, Pub. L. No. 103-150, 107 Stat. 1510 (1993) (hereinafter referred to as Apology Resolution) are relevant to this transfer of sovereignty: “Whereas the Republic of Hawaii also ceded 1,800,000 acres of crown, government and public lands of the Kingdom of Hawaii, without the consent of or compensation to the Native Hawaiian people of Hawaii or their sovereign government;” “Whereas the Newlands Resolution effected the transaction between the Republic of Hawaii and the United States Government; Whereas the indigenous Hawaiian people never directly relinquished their claims
40
These lands, which included both the Government and Crown Lands, were estimated to amount
to almost 1.8 million acres, with a value of at least $5.5 million.84
Throughout the debates in the U.S. Congress over the Organic Act that would rule
Hawaiʻi as a territory, the Hui Kālaiʻāina and Hui Aloha ʻĀina advocated for the restoration of
Native Hawaiian voting rights, which had been denied by the Provisional Government and the
Republic.85
Native Hawaiian National Organizations of Self-Governance
In 1900, the Hui Kālaiʻāina and the Hui Aloha ʻĀina founded the Home Rula Kūʻokoʻa
(Independent Home Rule Party). Importantly, the Independent Home Rule Party won the
overwhelming majority of seats in the Territorial House of Representatives and Senate, as well as
the coveted position of delegate to the U.S. Congress. The Native Hawaiian people had rallied on
every island and demonstrated the strength of their political organization, despite the suppression
of their voting rights throughout the previous seven years.86
Queen Liliʻuokalani continued to embody the Hawaiian Kingdom and Constitutional
Monarchy and was considered to be the iconic leader of a parallel Native Hawaiian government
of her people. When she passed away in 1917, Prince Jonah Kūhiō Kalanianaʻole, who had been
to their inherent sovereignty as a people or over their national lands to the United States, either through their monarchy or through a plebiscite of referendum[.]” 84 J. F. Brown, Agent of Public Lands, reported to the Hawaiian Commission, which had been appointed pursuant to the Joint Resolution of Annexation, a total of 1,772,640 acres of public land conservatively valued at $5,581,000, as of August 12, 1898. The Report of the Hawaiian Commission (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1898), p. 45 app. 1. 85 Andrade, Unconquerable Rebel, pp. 182-83. 86 Davianna Pōmaikaʻi McGregor, “Kūpaʻa I Ka ʻĀina: Persistence on the Land” (University of Hawaiʻi, Unpublished dissertation, 1989), pp. 201-224.
41
in line to succeed Queen Liliʻuokalani under the Hawaiian monarchy, assumed the mantle of
national leader of the Native Hawaiian people and advocated for their national rights.87
Native Hawaiian national leaders who had been prominent in the government of Queen
Liliʻuokalani were active in the organizing of the Independent Home Rule Party, to field Native
Hawaiian candidates to assert their inherent sovereignty as a people and assume their rightful
positions in the governance of the islands. These leaders found themselves in an uneasy but
necessary alliance with missionary descendants, American business interests, and owners of
plantations and ranches in the governance of Hawaiʻi. However, the overarching framework of
governance and the balance of power had shifted away from the Hawaiian Kingdom and
Constitutional Monarchy to the white oligarchy, which began to rule Hawaiʻi as a Territory of
the United States of America, under the Organic Act of 1900.88
As their predecessors had done under the Hawaiian Kingdom and Constitutional
Monarchy, Native Hawaiian leaders––descendants of aliʻi, nā koa (warriors), kāhuna and
makaʻāinana (commoners) - fully participated in the governance of Hawaiʻi and sustained and
formed new political, civic and benevolent organizations that provided for the well-being of the
Native Hawaiian people inside and outside of the formal government. Those organizations, 87 Article 22 of the Bayonet Constitution of 1887 provided for the monarch to name his or her successor. The will of King Kalākaua lists the line of succession that he envisioned: first, his sister, Princess Liliʻuokalani; second, his niece, Princess Kaʻiulani; third, his wife, Queen Kapiʻolani; fourth, his sister-in-law, Princess Poʻomaikelani; fifth, the eldest son of his sister-in-law, Prince David Kawananākoa; sixth, the second son of his sister-in-law, Prince Kūhiō Kalanianaʻole. The latter two were to assume the name and title of Kalākaua and to be numbered in order from him. Hawaiian Gazette, March 10, 1891. The Hawaiian Gazette of March 24, 1891, published a proclamation dated March 9, 1891, by Queen Liliʻuokalani naming Princess Kaʻiulani as her successor. There is no similar proclamation naming any other successor. The Queen’s Constitution, which she intended to promulgate in January 1893, shows the line of succession to be first, Princess Kaʻiulani; second, Prince David Kawananākoa; and third, Prince Jonah Kūhiō Kalanianaʻole. Affairs in Hawaii, p. 1049. By 1917, both Princess Kaʻiulani and Prince David Kawananākoa had passed away. 88 An Act to Provide a Government for the Territory of Hawaii (Hawaiian Organic Act of 1900), Pub. L. No. 56–331, 31 Stat. 141 (1900).
42
which existed outside of the formal government of the Territory of Hawaiʻi, began to assume the
rudimentary functions of a government of the Native Hawaiian people, who were now relegated
to the position of an indigenous people of a territory now claimed to be a part of United States of
America.
The ʻAhahui Pu‘uhonua O Nā Hawai‘i (Hawai‘i Protective Association), organized in
November 1914 by 200 Native Hawaiian leaders, was one such organization. The ʻAhahui
Puʻuhonua published its own newspaper, spoke through churches and civic groups, encouraged
education in agricultural pursuits, and published articles in other newspapers.89
The health and social conditions of Native Hawaiians at the opening of the 20th century,
especially in urban Honolulu, were alarming. Moreover, large ranches and plantations were
displacing Native Hawaiian taro farmers and fishers who could move to Honolulu or remain
marginalized in isolated rural communities. There was a widespread belief that the Native
Hawaiian people were doomed to extinction. These conditions spurred Native Hawaiian leaders
to undertake a systematic campaign to improve the living conditions of their people.90
In 1918, the ʻAhahui Puʻuhonua developed a plan to “rehabilitate” impoverished Native
Hawaiians exposed to diseases, such as tuberculosis, in the crowded tenements and squatter
camps of Honolulu. Led by Prince Jonah Kūhiō Kalanianaʻole, Hawaiʻi’s delegate to the U.S.
Congress, they drafted legislation to have congress reserve the former Hawaiian Crown lands for
exclusive homesteading by Native Hawaiians. In December 1918, Prince Kūhiō and leaders of
the ʻAhahui Puʻuhonua formed a second organization of Native Hawaiians, the Hawaiian Civic
Clubs, which included regional clubs on all the islands to help gain support for the rehabilitation
plan. Both organizations campaigned vigorously and successfully to bring about the enactment of 89 Davianna Pōmaikaʻi McGregor, “ʻĀina Hoʻopulapula: Hawaiian Homesteading,” Hawaiian Journal of History, Vol 24 (1990), pp. 1-4. 90 Id., p. 9.
43
the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act. 91 In 1921, the U.S. Congress passed the Hawaiian
Homes Commission Act, setting aside over 200,000 acres of former Crown and Government
lands of the Hawaiian Kingdom for homesteading by Native Hawaiians of not less than one-half
Hawaiian ancestry.
Despite the general policy of assimilating the people of the Territory of Hawaiʻi into
American society, the U.S. President, U.S. Secretary of Interior and the U.S. Congress
acknowledged Native Hawaiians as a distinct, indigenous people with whom the U.S. had a
special trust relationship. This was most evident in, but not limited to, the mandate of the U.S.
Bureau of American Ethnology to research Native Hawaiians, the passage of the Hawaiian
Homes Commission Act in 1921, the Kalapana Extension Act in 1938, and the 1959 Act
admitting Hawaiʻi as a state.92
Territory of Hawaiʻi: 1921 – 1959
Native Hawaiian National Organizations of Self-Governance
Generation 32 [Generation 127]
Hawaiian Civic Clubs, Hawaiian Royal Societies, Hawaiian Homeland
Associations, Hawaiian Land Hui
Despite obstacles, Native Hawaiian leaders were determined to fulfill the potential of the
Hawaiian Home Lands program on Molokaʻi, Hawaiʻi, Maui, Oʻahu and Kauaʻi. From the first
generation to move on to these lands in 1922, to the present third generation, Native Hawaiian
91 Id.; Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, Pub. L. No. 67-34, 42 Stat. 108 (1921). 92 Id. The Kalapana Extension Act and Admission Act are discussed in the next section.
44
homesteaders established solid and hard-working communities and formed organizations of self-
governance, political advocacy and economic advancement.93
Likewise, Hawaiian Civic Clubs on every island continued to function as distinct political
and social entities for civic purposes, scholarship programs and cultural perpetuation. Hawaiian
national leaders persisted in organizing the Hawaiian Civic Clubs and associations of Hawaiian
homesteaders throughout the 20th century to the present, to advocate for Native Hawaiian rights,
land claims and benefits, and to promote the culture.
During the territorial period, the Aliʻi Trusts, charitable land-based trusts formed by
various Hawaiian rulers, also continued with their mission to support and advance the health,
education and welfare of the Native Hawaiian community.94
Other Hawaiian organizations also continued to keep alive uniquely Native Hawaiian
perspectives in political, civic and social organizations. Among them are the four Royal
Societies, each with a deep connection to an earlier period of the Hawaiian Kingdom - the Royal
Order of Kamehameha I, the Kaʻahumanu Society, the Daughters and Sons of Hawaiian
Warriors–Māmakakaua, and the Hale O Nā Aliʻi O Hawaiʻi.
These political and civic organizations were bolstered in the 1970s by a strong resurgence
of Native Hawaiian political activism focused on the protection of ancestral lands and historic
and cultural sites, access to subsistence resources and Native Hawaiian self-determination and
self-governance. This was complemented by a renaissance of Hawaiian language, hula (dance),
navigational science and the healing arts.
93 Every homestead community has its own association and more recently many of the organizations have confederated into what is now called The Sovereign Councils of the Hawaiian Homelands Assembly. See http://www.schha.com/about-schha-2/ (last visited June 1, 2014). 94 The Aliʻi Trusts are the William Charles Lunalilo Trust, the Queen Emma Trust, the Kamehameha Schools/Bernice Pauahi Bishop/Trust, and the Queen Liliʻuokalani Trust.
45
Hawaiian National and Cultural Identity During the Territorial Period
The communities established under the Hawaiian Home Lands program became
significant centers of Native Hawaiian cultural, social and economic life and contributed to the
persistence of Native Hawaiians as a distinct people within the Hawaiian Islands.
In addition to the Hawaiian Home Lands communities, small rural enclaves or cultural
kīpuka with majority Native Hawaiian populations played a singularly critical role in the
continuity of Native Hawaiians as a distinct people with a unique culture, language and ancestral
land base. These communities sustained a prolonged and uninterrupted continuity of settlement
and tenure on the lands of their ancestors. Community members persisted in providing for their
ʻohana through subsistence fishing, farming and gathering which were conducted according to
traditional and customary cultural practices and guided by spiritual and cultural beliefs. Such
practices continued to be protected by laws established under the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi, laws that
survived into and beyond the Territorial Period.95
The term kīpuka refers to an oasis of old growth forest in the volcanic rainforests that
were bypassed by volcanic flows and which provide the seed pool for the regeneration of the
forest in areas covered by lava. Key rural communities throughout the islands were bypassed by
the mainstream of economic and political changes in the Hawaiian islands and remained
strongholds of Native Hawaiian culture. Like the dynamic life forces in a natural kīpuka, cultural
kīpuka are communities from which Native Hawaiian culture can be regenerated and revitalized
in the contemporary settings in Hawaiʻi. Moreover, from the examination of the lives of those
who lived in these isolated communities, those called kuaʻāina (back country folk) emerges a
profile of the strongest and most resilient aspects of the Native Hawaiian culture and way of life.
95 See generally McGregor, Na Kuaʻāina.
46
Such an examination provides insight into how the Native Hawaiian culture persisted despite
dynamic forces of political and economic change throughout the 20th century. The 1930 census
identified seventeen rural communities where Native Hawaiians comprised a majority of the
population and the culture thrived. Noted sociologist and professor, Andrew Lind, wrote of the
significance of these areas for the continuity of the Hawaiian culture:
[S]mall population islands still relatively secure from the strong currents which have swept the archipelago as a whole into the world-complex of trade - are strikingly similar to those which appear in the census of 1853. The dry and rocky portions of Kau, Puna and the Kona coast, the deep valley of Waipio, the wild sections of Hana, Maui, portions of lonely Lanai and Molokai where industrial methods of agriculture have not succeeded, the leper settlement, and Niihau, the island of mystery - these are the places of refuge for some 4,400 or nearly one-fifth, of the native Polynesians . . . .96
The diverse undeveloped natural resources in these areas provided an abundance of foods
for the Native Hawaiians who lived there. Forested lands provided Hawaiians with fruits to eat;
vines, plants and woods for making household implements and tools; and herbs to heal
themselves. They provided a natural habitat for animals that were hunted for meat. Marine life
flourished in the streams. The ocean provided an abundance of food. Subsistence activities
continued to be the primary source of sustenance for the Native Hawaiians in these districts.
Production in these districts was primarily oriented around home consumption. Importantly,
Native Hawaiian cultural practices dictated a strong ethic of sustainable harvesting and
protection of the natural resources. The quality and abundance of the natural resources of these
rural Hawaiian communities can be attributed to the persistence of traditional Hawaiian values
and practices in the conduct of their subsistence activities.97
96 Andrew Lind, An Island Community: Ecological Succession in Hawaii. (Chicago: The Univ. of Chicago, 1938; reprint New York: Greenwood Press, 1968), pp. 102-103. 97 McGregor, Nā Kuaʻāina, pp. 15-17.
47
Continuing Recognition of Native Hawaiians as a Distinct Native People
While the United States policy was to incorporate the Territory of Hawaiʻi into the
United States and to Americanize the multi-ethnic peoples of Hawaiʻi, the U.S. Congress,
nevertheless, instituted programs and adopted policies that recognized the Native Hawaiian
people as the indigenous people of Hawaiʻi. As noted earlier, Congress continued to appropriate
funds for ethnological research among “the American Indians and the natives of Hawaii” until
1949. As discussed above, the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act established an express trust
relationship with the Native Hawaiian beneficiaries of the Act and established a land trust for
Hawaiian homesteading. In 1938, Congress passed the Kalapana Extension Act, which extended
the Hawaiian Volcanoes National Park in the Puna district of Hawaiʻi Island, and allows
Kalapana Native Hawaiians and those accompanied by them to fish and gather in the Volcanoes
National Park. The Kalapana Extension Act also had a provision for Kalapana Native Hawaiians
to apply for homesteads in the Volcanoes National Park, although this latter provision was never
implemented.98
State of Hawaiʻi: 1959 to Present
Native Hawaiian National Organizations of Self-Governance Generations 33 [Generation 128] 1959 – 1993
A.L.O.H.A., Ali'i Trusts, Alu Like, Congress of Hawaiian People, Hawaiian Civic
Clubs, Hawaiian Homestead Associations, Hawaiian Royal Societies, Hou
Hawaiians, Hui Ala Loa, Ka Lāhui Hawaiʻi, Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Protect
Kahoʻolawe ʻOhana, Sovereign Council of Hawaiian Homelands Assembly, The
Hawaiians
Generation 34 [Generation 129] 1993 – present
98 Kalapana Extension Act, Pub. L. No. 75-680, § 3, 55 Stat. 784, 784-85 (1938).
48
Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement, Hā Hawaiʻi-ʻAhaʻŌiwi Hawaiʻi,
Kanaʻiolowalu-Native Hawaiian Roll Commission, The Nation of Hawaiʻi
In 1959, Hawaiʻi became a state, and in the act admitting Hawaiʻi to statehood, key
provisions demonstrated the United States’ continuing recognition of Native Hawaiians as a
distinct population of indigenous people. The 1959 Admission Act mandated that the State of
Hawaiʻi, as a compact with the U.S., administer the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act and the
approximately 200,000 acres of “ceded land” set aside for Native Hawaiian homesteading, with
oversight by the U.S. Congress. Congress also turned over administration of another 1.2 million
acres of “ceded lands,” the former Crown and Government lands of the Hawaiian Kingdom, to
the State to manage for five trust purposes. One trust purpose is “the betterment of the
conditions” of Native Hawaiians, as defined by the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act. The other
four purposes include education, farm and home ownership, public improvements and public
uses.99
In the years following statehood, outside investors began to finance major housing and
resort developments on Oʻahu and throughout the islands. In 1969, farmers were evicted from
Kalama Valley in east Oʻahu in order to expand “Hawaiʻi Kai,” a subdivision development. This
eviction sparked a broad grassroots movement to challenge uncontrolled development on Oʻahu.
In the broader island society, communities began to organize against the eviction of working
class and farming communities to make way for urban renewal and suburban subdivisions. In
response to proposed developments in Hawaiian communities, Native Hawaiians asserted their
inherent sovereignty by forming political organizations to hold the managers of the Native
Hawaiian public and private land trusts accountable for the appropriate stewardship of Hawaiian
99 See §§ 4 (HHCA) and 5 (public land trust), Admission Act, Pub. L. No. 86-3, 73 Stat. 4 (1959).
49
lands. In rural communities, Native Hawaiians formed organizations to protect ancestral lands,
cultural lifestyles, sacred sites and access to natural resources for subsistence.100
On Hawaiʻi Island, Native Hawaiian communities in Kaʻū and Puna organized to stop a
spaceport and to protect the volcano deity Pele from geothermal development. On Molokaʻi,
Native Hawaiians formed community organizations to open access across private lands, stop
tourist developments that threated subsistence resources and start community-based economic
development programs. On Maui, Native Hawaiian communities in Makena, Hāna and Kipahulu
organized to keep their access and water rights and to develop community-based economic
development projects. On Kauaʻi and Oʻahu, Native Hawaiian communities worked to protect
their cultural and natural resources and initiated community-based economic development
projects.101
The island of Kahoʻolawe, which was used as a live-fire bombing and firing range by the
U.S. Navy, served as a catalyst to rally Native Hawaiians throughout the islands around a
common cause of “Aloha ʻĀina” or “Love and respect the land, its resources and the life forces
of the land that were honored and worshipped by Hawaiian ancestors as deities.” This Hawaiian
saying also evoked the nationalist spirit of Hawaiian ancestors who had organized the Hui Aloha 100 Davianna McGregor-Alegado, “Hawaiians: Organizing in the 1970s,” Amerasia 7:2(1980), pp. 29-55; Haunani Kay Trask, Kuʻe: Thirty Years of Land Struggle in Hawaiʻi, Ed Greevy, photographer (Honolulu: Mutual Publishing, 2004). These communities included Halawa Housing (1971); Ota Camp (1972; Censust Tract 57 People’s Movement (1972); People Against Chinatown Eviction (1972); Waimanalo People’s Organization (1973); Old Vineyard St. Residents’ Association (1973); Young St. Residents’ Assn (1973); Niumalu-Nawiliwili Residents (1973); Waiahole-Waikane Community Assn (1974); Heʻeia Kea (1975); Mokauea Fishermen’s Assn (1975); Hale Mohalu (1978); Sand Island Residents (1979). 101 Davianna Pōmaikaʻi McGregor, “Recognizing Native Hawaiians: A Quest for Sovereignty,” Pacific Diaspora: Island Peoples in the United States and Across the Pacific (eds. Paul Spickard, Joanne Rondilla, Debbie Hippolite Wright) (Honolulu: Univ. of Hawaiʻi Press, 2002), pp. 336-337. Organizations on Hawaiʻi - Ka ʻOhana O KaLae and Pele Defense Fund; Molokaʻi - Hui Ala Loa, Ka Leo O Manaʻe, Hui Hoʻopakela ʻĀina; Maui - Hui Ala Nui O Makena, Hāna Pohaku, Keʻanae Community Assn; Kauaʻi - Native Hawaiian Farmers of Hanalei; Oʻahu - Hui Malama ʻĀina O Koʻolau, Kaʻala Farms, Opelu Project, Nā Hoaʻāina O Makaha.
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ʻĀina or Hawaiian Patriotic League in 1893 to support the constitutional monarchy and oppose
annexation. 102 Forming the Protect Kahoʻolawe ‘Ohana (Extended Family to Protect
Kahoʻolawe), Native Hawaiians worked to stop the bombing and military use of the island until
they succeeded in 1990. As the movement evolved, the organization revived traditional Hawaiian
religious practices on the island, such as the annual Makahiki or Harvest Season ritual that
honors the Hawaiian god of agricultural productivity, Lono. The ceremonies, which had ceased
with the ʻAi Noa in 1819, called Lono back into the lives of the Native Hawaiian people, asking
him to bring the seasonal rains that nourish the land and make it fertile so that the cycle of
planting and harvest can start again. From Kaho‘olawe, participants who had come from every
island, began to conduct the ceremonies on their home islands of Hawaiʻi, Oʻahu and Moloka‘i.
Through Kahoʻolawe, the Native Hawaiian people re-established their beliefs and customary
practices which honored the ʻāina as sacred life forces.
Native Hawaiian Organizations of Governance
Possibly the first newly formed Native Hawaiian political organization of the 1970s was
called “The Hawaiians.” The organization formed chapters on every island in 1970 to seek
reforms in the management of the Hawaiʻi State Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, which
administers the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act. One of their main goals was to enable
qualified beneficiaries, many of whom had been on the application list for 15 to 20 years, to be
placed on the trust lands set aside by the Act.103
102 One of the founders of the Protect Kahoʻolawe ʻOhana, Noa Emmett Aluli, was a grand-nephew of Emma and Joseph Nawahī who founded the Hui Aloha ʻĀina and published the Aloha Āina newspaper. 103 Tom Coffman The Island Edge of America: A Political History of Hawaiʻi (Honolulu: Univ. of Hawaiʻi Press, 2003), pp. 294-95.
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Following the lead of The Hawaiians, in 1971, the Congress of Hawaiian People formed
on Oʻahu. This organization monitored the administration of Kamehameha Schools, an aliʻi trust
created by Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop, which was formerly known as Kamehameha Schools
Bishop Estate. The Congress of Hawaiian People scrutinized the land transactions of the trustees
of the Bishop Estate and sought to expand educational opportunities for Native Hawaiians at the
Kamehameha Schools and improve access to those opportunities.104
In 1972, Aboriginal Lands of Hawaiian Ancestry (A.L.O.H.A.) became the first Native
Hawaiian organization to focus on claims of Native Hawaiians arising out of the role of the U.S.
government in the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy. A.L.O.H.A. worked with Hawaiʻi’s
congressional delegation to introduce a bill, modeled after the 1972 Alaska Native Claims
Settlement Act, to provide monetary reparations to Native Hawaiians. As a result of these efforts,
a series of “reparations” bills was introduced in Congress. 105 In 1976, in order to draw the
attention of the U.S. Congress to the injustices and cultural trauma borne by Native Hawaiians,
and to stress the importance of the reparations bill, then A.L.O.H.A. president Charles Maxwell
called for the occupation of the island of Kahoʻolawe. This was the inception of the movement to
stop the bombing of Kahoʻolawe, which led to the formation of the Protect Kahoʻolawe ʻOhana.
Although not immediately successful, A.L.O.H.A.’s efforts eventually led to a 1980
congressional action establishing a Native Hawaiians Study Commission to investigate “the
culture, needs, and concerns” of the Native Hawaiian community.106 As discussed below, the
Protect Kahoʻolawe ʻOhana developed into an islands-wide organization that ultimately stopped
104 Id. p. 44 - 45. 105 See, e.g., H.R. 15666, 93rd Cong., 2d Sess. (introduced June 27, 1974); H.R. 1944, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. (introduced January 23, 1975). 106 Pub. L. No. 96-565, Title III, § 303(a) (December 22, 1980).
52
the bombing of the island and resulted in the Native Hawaiian people sharing governance over
the island with the U.S. Navy.
Like A.L.O.H.A., other Native Hawaiian organizations formed to focus on the political
status of Native Hawaiians at the federal level. In 1975, Alu Like, Inc. (Working Together)
started as a non-profit organization of Native Hawaiians on every island to qualify for funding
from the Office of Native American Programs (now the Administration for Native Americans).
Similarly, the Hou Hawaiians have actively asserted status as a tribal government in litigation in
the federal courts. 107 Self-governance on lands set aside under the Hawaiian Homes
Commission Act has also served as a focal point for Hawaiian homestead associations.108
In 1987, Ka Lāhui Hawaiʻi (The Hawaiian Nation) organized a constitutional convention
with representatives from every island. They adopted a governing structure with elected officials.
At one point, more than 20,000 Native Hawaiians had enrolled in the organization. Their
constitution laid the groundwork for a democratically elected nation of Hawaiʻi within the
American federal and state system, contemplating a government-to-government relationship with
the federal and state governments.109
In 1993, Dennis “Bumpy” Puʻuhonua Kanahele and a group of 300 people, formed the
Nation of Hawaiʻi, and occupied an area at Makapuʻu beach on Oʻahu, in resistance to U.S.
actions in Hawaiʻi and seeking the return of Hawaiian lands. After a 15-month occupation, the
Nation of Hawaiʻi was allowed to move to a 45-acre parcel of state land in Waimānalo, which
they have successfully maintained since that time as a place to live Hawaiian cultural values and 107 See discussion of the Hou Hawaiians’ claim of tribal status in Price v. State, 764 F.2d 623 (9th Cir. 1985). 108 See Stu Glauberman, Third Hawaiian group enters self-determination fight, HONOLULU ADVERTISER, July 25, 1989, at A-3. 109 See Mililani Trask, Ka Lāhui Hawaiʻi: A Native Initiative for Sovereignty, available at http://www.hawaii-nation.org/turningthetide-6-4.html; Ka Lāhui’s constitution is available at http://kalahuihawaii.wordpress.com/ka-lahui-hawaii-constitution/ (last visited June 12, 2013).
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agricultural practices, and as a puʻuhonua––a place of healing and refuge.110
In the late 1990s, Hā Hawaiʻi, a non-profit organization, helped to hold an election and
convene an ʻAha ʻŌiwi Hawaiʻi (Native Hawaiian Convention) of 77 delegates to bring together
the various groups working to solidify Native Hawaiian governance and to develop a constitution
and create a central government model for Native Hawaiian self-determination.111 Two proposals
emerged from the convention––one calling for independence and the other establishing a
framework for a “nation within a nation” government. 112 Due to financial constraints, the
proposals were never put to a vote.
More recently, the Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement has taken on the kuleana
(responsibility) of working with Native Hawaiian organizations and individuals to enhance the
cultural, economic and community development of Native Hawaiians and serving as a forum for
discussing the important policy issues––including sovereignty and the U.S.-Native Hawaiian
relationship––facing the Hawaiian community.113
Recognition of Native Hawaiian Self-Determination and Governance
The first important response to these Native Hawaiian organizations exercising varying
aspects of Native Hawaiian sovereignty and self-governance was the 1974 inclusion of Native
Hawaiians, by the U.S. Congress, in the definition of Native Americans who could qualify for
110 See Tomas Alex Tizon, “Rebuilding a Hawaiian Kingdom,” Los Angeles Times, July 21, 2005; Dan Nakasao, “A Life of Resistance,” Honolulu Star-Advertiser, July 6, 2014. 111 The Department of the Interior and the Department of Justice, From Mauka to Makai: The River of Justice Must Flow Freely, Report on the Reconciliation Process Between the Federal Government and Native Hawaiians (October 23, 2000), p. 44. 112 ʻAha Hawaiʻi ʻOiwi,The Native Hawaiian Convention: A Consultation with the People, http://hawaiianperspectives.org/CompleteBooklet.htm (last visited Feb. 8, 2014). 113 See Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement, available at http://www.hawaiiancouncil.org (last visited June 12, 2013).
54
the funding and programs set up under the Native American Programs Act.114 As noted above, in
1975, Native Hawaiian leaders in Hawaiʻi formed the nonprofit organization Alu Like, Inc. in
order to qualify for the Native American Programs Act and channel federal funds into the
community for job training, small business development and overall social and economic
development.115 Shortly thereafter, the people of Hawaiʻi and the state government followed the
federal government’s lead in affirming the inherent rights of Native Hawaiians as an indigenous
people.
The 1978 Constitutional Convention and the Office of Hawaiian Affairs
In 1978, Hawaiʻi held its second constitutional convention since becoming a state. As a
result, far-reaching amendments that spoke to the long-standing claims of the Native Hawaiian
community, particularly claims of self-determination and sovereignty, were adopted and
approved by a majority of the Hawaiʻi electorate.
One amendment established the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) with a nine-member
board of trustees elected by all Native Hawaiian residents of the State of Hawai‘i.116 As a result,
Native Hawaiians were able to elect a governing body that truly represented their interests as a
people distinct from the general population of Hawaiʻi. In addition to establishing OHA, another 114 The Native Americans Programs Act was enacted as Title VIII of the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, Pub. L. No. 88-452 (1964); Native Hawaiians were added to the definition of Native Americans by Pub. L. No. 93-644, § 801, 88 Stat. 2992, 2324 (1975). 115 Coffman, The Island Edge of America, pp. 296-97. 116 Hawaiʻi State Constitution, art. XII, § 5 (1978). In 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the state law limiting OHA voters to Hawaiians as violating the 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Rice v. Cayetano, 528 U.S. 495, 520 (2000). The State, the U.S. Solicitor General and many native rights organizations, had argued that the voting limitation was permissible based upon the political relationship between the U.S. and native peoples and the history of special protections for native peoples. The Court, however, viewed OHA elections as solely state elections, distinguishable from elections of Indian communities, the internal affairs of quasi-sovereign governments. Subsequently, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals also struck down the requirement that candidates for OHA trustees be of Hawaiian ancestry. Arakaki v. State, 314 F.3d 1091 (9th Cir. 2002). As a result, currently all Hawaiʻi voters elect OHA trustees and any Hawaiʻi resident can serve as an OHA trustee.
55
amendment specifically designated Native Hawaiians and the general public as the beneficiaries
of the “public land trust,” which consists of Government and Crown lands of the Hawaiian
Kingdom and Constitutional Monarchy.117 These amendments also set a pro rata share of the
revenue from the public land trust as a primary funding source for OHA and gave the trustees
extensive independent authority.118
Kahoʻolawe - Recognition of Shared Governance
As described earlier, the Protect Kaho‘olawe ‘Ohana (ʻOhana) was founded to stop the
U.S. Navy bombing of the island of Kaho‘olawe, heal the island and reclaim it for the Native
Hawaiian people.119 Along with continued landings on the Island, the ‘Ohana also filed a federal
lawsuit to enjoin the Navy from further bombing.120 In October 1980, the parties entered into a
Consent Decree and Order, which required that the United States “recognize that Plaintiffs’
organization [the ʻOhana] seeks to act as stewards of the moku [island] Kahoʻolawe,” and gave
the ʻOhana access to the island with the responsibility to evaluate and ensure that the Navy lived
up to specific responsibilities set out in the order.121 Thus both in practice and as a matter of law,
a Native Hawaiian political organization exercised shared governance responsibility with the 117 Hawaiʻi State Constituton, art. XII, § 4 (1978). The definition of the public land trust in art. XII, § 4, excludes the more than 200,000 acres of Hawaiian Homelands since those lands are impressed with a separate, distinct trust for Native Hawaiians. See Hawaiʻi State Constitution, art. XII, § 2. 118 Hawaiʻi State Constitution, art. XII, §§ 5-6 (1978). Other amendments adopted in 1978 mandated that the Legislature provide the Hawaiian Home Lands program with sufficient funding (art. XII, § 1), reaffirmed the traditional and customary rights of ahupuaʻa tenants (art. XII, § 7), required a Hawaiian education program in public schools (art. X, § 4) and designated the Hawaiian language as one of Hawaiʻi’s two official languages (art. XV, § 4). 119 Noa Emmett Aluli, “The Most “Shot-at” Island in the Pacific: The Struggle to Save Kaho‘olawe,” in Islands in Captivity: The Record of the International Tribunal on the Rights of Indigenous Hawaiians (eds. Ward Churchill & Sharon H. Venne) (Cambridge, MA: South End Press, 2005), p. 242. 120 Aluli v. Brown, 437 F. Supp. 602, 604 (D. Haw. 1977). 121 Consent Decree and Order, December 1, 1980, filed in the United States District Court, Civil No. 76-0380 in Aluli, et al., v Brown, Secretary of Defense, et al. (signed by Hon. William Schwarzer, (D.C. N.D. Cal.)
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U.S. Navy over the Island of Kahoʻolawe, from 1980 until 2003, while the United States Navy
retained control of access to Kahoʻolawe.122 A United States District Court gave cognizance to a
Native Hawaiian political organization “acting as stewards of the island” for a period of nearly
23 years (from December 1, 1980 to November 11, 2003 when control of access to Kahoʻolawe
was transferred to the State of Hawaiʻi). Moreover, under the Consent Decree, the Court
accorded specific access to Kahoʻolawe––not to the State or County officials––but to the ʻOhana,
a Native Hawaiian political organization.
In 1993, Congress acknowledged the cultural significance of the island, required the
Navy to return the island to the State of Hawaiʻi and directed the Navy to conduct an unexploded
ordnance cleanup and environmental restoration in consultation with the state.123 Hawai‘i law
guarantees that when a sovereign Native Hawaiian entity is established and recognized by the
United States, the state will transfer management and control of Kaho‘olawe to that entity.124
The 1993 Apology Resolution & Mauka to Makai Report––Reconciliation
In 1993, the U.S. Congress passed, and President Clinton signed into law, a joint
resolution apologizing to the Native Hawaiian people for U.S. participation in the overthrow of
the Hawaiian Kingdom. 125 The Apology Resolution explicitly acknowledged the “special
relationship” that exists between the United States and the Native Hawaiian people. Congress
confirmed in the Apology Resolution that Native Hawaiians are an “indigenous people.”126
Congress also acknowledged that the Republic of Hawai‘i ceded 1.8 million acres of Crown,
Government and Public Lands of the Kingdom of Hawai‘i to the United States without the 122 Title to Kahoʻolawe was transferred to Hawaiʻi on May 7, 1994, but control of access and the Consent Decree remained in full force and effect until November 11, 2003. 123 Department of Defense Appropriations Act of 1994, Pub. L. No. 103-139, tit. X, 107 Stat. 1418 (1993). 124 Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes § 6K-9 (2012). 125 Apology Resolution. 126 Id. clause 8.
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consent of or compensation to the Native Hawaiian people or their sovereign government; that
the Native Hawaiian people never directly relinquished their claims to their inherent sovereignty
over their national lands to the United States; and that the overthrow was illegal.127 Congress
expressed its commitment to acknowledge the ramifications of the overthrow of the Kingdom of
Hawai‘i, in order to provide a proper foundation for reconciliation between the United States and
the Native Hawaiian people, and it urged the President of the United States to support
reconciliation efforts between the United States and the Native Hawaiian people.128
In 1999, the U.S. Department of the Interior and the Department of Justice conducted
meetings in Hawai‘i to investigate progress on the reconciliation called for in the Apology
Resolution and to solicit input from the Hawaiian community. Oral and written testimony from
community members touched on topics ranging from sovereignty to community and economic
development and from health and education to housing. The Departments issued
recommendations in their report, Mauka to Makai: The River of Justice Must Flow Freely in
2000.129 The recommendation to establish an Office of Native Hawaiian Relations (ONR), in the
Secretary of Interior’s Office, has been implemented.130
127 Id., clauses 26 & 29 and § 1. 128 Id., § 1. 129 Department of Interior and Department of Justice, Mauka to Makai: The River of Justice Must Flow Freely (October 23, 2000). 130 Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2004, Pub. L No. 108-199, 118 Stat. 3, div. H, sec. 148 (2004). ONR is tasked with implementing the “special legal relationship” between the Native Hawaiian people and the United States; continuing the process of reconciliation with the Native Hawaiian people; and fully integrating the principle and practice of meaningful, regular and appropriate consultation with the Native Hawaiian people by assuring timely notification and prior consultation before federal agencies take actions that have the potential to significantly affect Native Hawaiian resources, rights or lands. Similarly, the U.S. State Department, in announcing the United States’ support for the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, included Native Hawaiians as one of the indigenous peoples in the U.S. to whom the Declaration applies. The State Department cited support for Congressional efforts to form a government-to-government relationship between the U.S. and a reorganized Native Hawaiian government, as well as the many federal laws, “similar to those for other native people,” that specifically relate
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Act 195 and the Native Hawaiian Roll Commission––Unrelinquished Sovereignty
The latest recognition of Native Hawaiians and their inherent right to self-governance
came in 2011, when the State passed Act 195. Act 195 contains an unequivocal declaration of
recognition by stating that, “The Native Hawaiian people are hereby recognized as the only
indigenous, aboriginal, maoli people of Hawaii.” 131 The new law also identifies Native
Hawaiians as a distinctly native community, reaffirming that since its inception, the State “has
had a special political and legal relationship with the Native Hawaiian people and has
continuously enacted legislation for the betterment of their condition.”132 Moreover, the purpose
of the law is to “provide for and to implement the recognition of the Native Hawaiian people by
means and methods that will facilitate their self‑governance . . . .”133
Act 195 also expresses the State’s “desire to support the continuing development of a
reorganized Native Hawaiian governing entity and, ultimately, the federal recognition of Native
Hawaiians.” 134 Act 195 created a five-member Native Hawaiian Roll Commission responsible
for preparing and maintaining a roll and certifying that the individuals on the roll meet the
definition of a “qualified Native Hawaiian.”135 Since 2012, the Roll Commission has undertaken
to Native Hawaiians. Announcement of U.S. Support for the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples-Initiatives to Promote the Government-to-Government Relationship & Improve the Lives of Indigenous Peoples, U.S. Department of State, Dec. 16, 2010. 131 Act of July 6, 2011, No. 195, §2, 2011 Hawaiʻi Session Laws (codified at Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes Chap. 10H). 132 Id. at § 1. 133 Id. at § 2. 134 Id. at §§ 1-2. 135 Id. § 2. A “qualified Native Hawaiian,” is a “descendant of the aboriginal peoples who occupied the Hawaiian Islands prior to 1778” or someone “eligible in 1921 for the programs authorized by the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act of 1920, or . . . a direct lineal descendant.” In addition, a qualified Native Hawaiian must also have maintained a “significant cultural, social or civic connection to the Native Hawaiian community,” wish to participate in organizing a Native Hawaiian governing entity and be eighteen years or older.
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an extensive effort to inform the Native Hawaiian community of the enrollment process as well
as to gather support from Hawaiʻi’s general population. Kanaʻiolowalu, the Commission’s
campaign to “reunify Native Hawaiians in the self-recognition of unrelinquished sovereignty, by
enrolling Native Hawaiians and supporters in this declaration,” resulted in the enrollment of
almost 123,000 Native Hawaiians who seek to re-establish a Native Hawaiian government.136
Native Hawaiian Renaissance and Reaffirmation as a Distinct People
Economic and political developments stimulated by statehood transformed Hawaiʻi’s
social system and unexpectedly, rather than fully integrating Hawaiʻi’s people into American
life, laid the foundation for a Native Hawaiian cultural renaissance and revival of the historic
sovereignty movement. In developments that paralleled the sovereignty movement, traditional
cultural practices and arts were reinvigorated and revitalized. Traditional Native Hawaiian
navigational arts were revived through the voyages of the Hōkūleʻa, a double-hulled canoe that
has traveled the world using traditional wayfing methods. During the 1970s and 1980s, Hawaiian
music and traditional hula flourished as indicated by a substantial increase in the number of
hālau hula (hula schools), greater participation in the annual Merrie Monarch Hula Festival
honoring King David Kalākaua and the King Kamehameha Day oli (chant) and hula competition,
as well as the popularity of Hawaiian music radio stations and live-music venues on each island.
Lāʻau lapaʻau (traditional Hawaiian herbal healing practices), and hoʻoponopono (traditional
family dispute resolution) were also revived. The Hawaiian language was brought back from the
brink of extinction, subsistence access and gathering practices vital for rural Native Hawaiian
communities were recognized under state law, and other Hawaiian cultural practices––including
the protection of iwi kūpuna (ancestral remains) and practices relating to birth––have been
136 See Kanaʻiolowalu available at http://www.kanaiolowalu.org (last visited July 18, 2015).
60
revitalized by the Native Hawaiian community. Perhaps most importantly, legacy Native
Hawaiian lands of cultural and spiritual value have been reclaimed for the Hawaiian people.
Summary
Today, Native Hawaiians continue to live and thrive as a distinct, unique, indigenous
people in Hawaiʻi, the homeland. Native Hawaiians have remained undeterred in the quest to
exercise an inherent sovereignty that has never been relinquished through a formal government
that can represent them in government-to-government relations and enable them to better
perpetuate the Hawaiian culture and language and protect Hawaiian natural and cultural
resources and ancestral, trust and national lands. As we begin this moʻolelo, let us reflect upon
the words of Queen Liliʻuokalani expressing her love for her native people in her kāhea (call) to
stand firm, with one heart, in unity, as she continues to be the inspiration and national icon for
Nā Kānaka Maoli.
He aloha lā, he aloha No kuʻu lāhui ʻōiwi I hoʻokahi puʻuwai
Kupaʻa me ka lōkahi
O my love and adoration For my native people,
Be of one heart And stand firm with unity.
Verse 2, Ke Aloha ʻĀina / Love for the Land by
Her Majesty Queen Lili'uokalani 137
137 Unpublished Songs by Liliʻuokalani, Newly Arranged, Queen of Hawaii Liliuokalani, The Queen's Songbook: Her Majesty Queen Lili'uokalani [Dorothy Kahananui Gillett, Barbara Barnard Smith] (Honolulu: Hui Hānai, 1999), p. 194. The words of the song are: 1. He lei he aloha kēia lā This is a lei of love No kuʻu one hānau, For my birth sands, Kona mau kualono uliuli Its verdant ridges Nā lau nahele kūpaoa And fragrant greenery
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Pūʻili mai a paʻa i loko [I] embrace and hold close within me Ke aloha i ka ʻāina Love for the land Hāliu i ka mea mana I turn to the Almighty A e ola nō ka lāhui And the nation will live 2. He aloha lā, he aloha O my love and adoration No ku'u lāhui ʻōiwi For my native people, I ho'okahi puʻuwai Be of one heart Kūpa'a me ka lōkahi And stand firm with unity 3. He aloha lā, he aloha How precious and enchanting Ka makani o ka ‘āina, Is the wind of the land, I ka pā kolonahe mai As I feel the soft touch A ka makani lā he Moa'e Of the breeze heralded as the Moa'e 4. E alu ka pule i ka haku Let us focus our prayers upon the Lord Me ka naʻau haʻahaʻa With humble heart, E noi me ka walohia And ask in earnest sincerity E maliu mai nō ia That He pay heed [to us]
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